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Articles Tagged With: Neonatal

  • Ketamine Use in the Prevention of Postpartum Depression Is Premature

    A double-blinded, randomized clinical trial of 134 low-risk pregnant women in Iran undergoing scheduled cesarean deliveries was conducted to address if a single dose of ketamine during anesthesia induction has a role in the prevention of postpartum depression. The authors reported that depression scores using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale at two and four weeks after the cesarean delivery were significantly lower in the ketamine group vs. the control group.

  • Maternal and Pregnancy Characteristics Associated with Periviable Interventions

    In this case control study using U.S. live birth records between 22 and 23 weeks of gestation, maternal intervention was positively associated with increasing maternal age, Medicaid use, preeclampsia, birth defects, twin gestation, multiparity, and infertility treatments while being negatively associated with non-Hispanic Black race. Positive associations for neonatal intervention included non-Hispanic Black race, preeclampsia, Medicaid use, infertility treatments, less than a high school education, increasing maternal age, and twin gestation, and negative associations included birth defects and small for gestational age pregnancies.

  • 17P to Prevent Recurrent PTB in Singleton Gestations: The PROLONG Study

    In this large, double-blind, placebo-controlled, international trial, pregnant women at risk for preterm birth (PTB) between 16-36 weeks gestational age were randomized to an intramuscular weekly injection of either 17-hydroxyprogesterone caproate (17P) or placebo. There was no difference in rates of PTB or neonatal morbidity between these two groups. In comparison to the Meis trial published in 2003, the findings of the PROLONG trial question the use of intramuscular 17P injection as the cornerstone of PTB prevention.

  • Status Epilepticus

    The authors present an approach to the diagnostic evaluation and therapeutic management of neonates and children in SE.

  • Report: No Risk-Free Birth Settings; Access to Quality Care Vital

    A sweeping new analysis takes stock of U.S. maternal and neonatal care and includes recommendations for improvement.

  • The Emergency Department Management of Precipitous Delivery and Neonatal Resuscitation

    Emergency department providers should be familiar with the correct procedures to manage pregnancies, births, and subsequent neonatal resuscitations when they occur unexpectedly in the ED.

  • Refining the Evaluation and Management of Neonatal Herpes Infection

    Neonatal herpes infection usually presents with seizure, vesicular rash, or critical illness. The subset of infected patients without those signs were younger than two weeks of age and/or had cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis.

  • Delayed Cord Clamping

    Although a recent study has failed to show major benefit from delayed umbilical cord clamping, others have suggested neonates having delayed cord clamping have less need for transfusion, higher hematocrits, less neonatal morbidity, and diminished risk of intraventricular hemorrhage.
  • $350,000 outbreak hits hospital NICU