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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (
immaturity
)
4,335
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The physiologic
immaturity
of respiratory musculature and central respiratory control centers leads to an increased risk of apnea and respiratory complications following general anesthesia in the neonate. Regional anesthetic techniques, such as spinal and caudal epidural anesthesia, may obviate the need for general anesthesia and lessen the risks of perioperative morbidity. Although these techniques have been previously described in infants, most reports focus on regional anesthesia in the former preterm infant outside the actual neonatal period. There is relatively little or no information concerning regional anesthesia in neonates during the first week of life. We present four neonates (weight, 1.07 to 2.8 kg; gestational age, 27 to 35 weeks) who required anesthetic care during the first week of life for various surgical procedures, including vesicostomy placement,
gastroschisis
closure, and debridement of a lower-extremity wound. Either caudal epidural or spinal anesthesia was successfully used in the four neonates. Regional anesthesia was used as the sole technique without supplementation with intravenous or inhalational agents in three of the four neonates. The advantages, risks, and applications of regional anesthesia in the neonate are discussed.
...
PMID:Regional anesthesia in the preterm neonate. 142 95
Despite prenatal diagnosis, maternal transport and early perinatal treatment in specialized hospitals, improvement in overall mortality has not been observed among newborns with abdominal wall defects (omphalocele and
gastroschisis
). A comparison has been made, for both anomalies, between 55 cases treated in the periods 1967-1979 and 30 treated in the periods 1980-1985. In this last group 14 prenatally detected cases were separated from cases discovered at birth. Recent advances in treatment have reduced mortality rates for both of these anomalies. This was especially true for
gastroschisis
; in omphalocele cases, associated abnormalities appeared to be an unavoidable limiting factor in survival. With prenatal diagnosis a surprising increase in mortality rate was observed among omphalocele cases detected before birth. A possible reason for this is the total number of antenatally diagnosed cases that, with maternal transport, are concentrated in centers where surgical facilities are available. Before introduction of antenatal diagnosis, most of these cases would never have been observed by the pediatric surgeon because of death prior to referral or treatment.
Gastroschisis
cases may benefit more from antenatal recognition and early treatment because multiple abnormalities or
immaturity
are not so important limiting factors in survival as in omphalocele cases. Reduced trauma and contamination of exposed viscera, immediate treatment and adequate supportive measures may significantly reduce mortality rate in
gastroschisis
cases. Operative delivery of fetuses with an abdominal wall defect is controversial. The risk of vaginal route delivery has been over emphasized. Intrapartum rupture of an omphalocelic sac was an extremely rare event before introduction of antenatal diagnosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The fetus with an abdominal wall defect: management and outcome. 295 77
The Interstitial Cells of Cajal (ICC) are responsible for rhythmic electrical activity. A paralytic ileus is present in
gastroschisis
(GS), a malformation due to a defective closure of the abdominal wall through which part of the intestine herniates during pregnancy. In experimental GS, ICC morphological
immaturity
was shown in the rat foetus at-term but it could not be demonstrated whether differentiation is accomplished post-natally. For this purpose we morphologically investigated ICC, as well as enteric neurons and smooth muscle cells, in a case of human GS at birth and 1 month later when peristaltic activity had initiated. A 36 weeks gestation female was born by c/section with prenatal diagnosis of GS and possible volvulus of the herniated intestine. At birth, the necrotic intestine was resected and both ileostomy and colostomy were performed. The intestine continuity was restored after 4 weeks. Intestinal specimens, taken during both operations at the level of the proximal stoma, were immunostained with c-kit, neuron-specific-enolase and alpha-smooth-muscle-actin antibodies and some processed for electron microscopy. ICC were present at the myenteric plexus only. At birth, these cells were rare and ultrastructurally immature; 1 month later, when partial enteral feeding was tolerated, they formed rows or groups and many of them were ultrastructurally differentiated. Neurons and smooth muscle cells, immature at birth, had developed after 1 month. Therefore, ICC differentiation, as well as that of neurons and smooth muscle cells, is delayed at birth and this might explain the paralytic ileus in GS. One month later, differentiation quickly proceeded at all cellular levels paralleling the increasing tolerance of enteral nutrition.
...
PMID:Delayed development of interstitial cells of Cajal in the ileum of a human case of gastroschisis. 1826 58
Young maternal age has been associated with an increased risk of
gastroschisis
, while high maternal weight status has been associated with a decreased risk. We were interested in investigating the joint effect of these two risk factors to identify thresholds in risk associated with body mass index (BMI) for a given age. Data from the National Birth Defects Prevention Study included 464 case infants with
gastroschisis
and 4842 healthy controls. A generalised additive model with a bivariate spline for continuous maternal age and prepregnancy BMI was used to model the probability of
gastroschisis
. The bivariate spline in BMI and maternal age was significantly associated with
gastroschisis
(P = 0.0001) after adjustment for study centre, maternal race/ethnicity, education, income and number of persons supported by income, smoking, alcohol use, vitamin use, vasoconstrictor medication use and gestational diabetes. The data indicate that women who are younger and who have lower BMI are at the greatest risk; a woman with a BMI of 17 who gives birth at age 15 has 7 times the odds (adjusted odds ratio = 7.0 [95% CI 4.2, 11.5]) of having an offspring with
gastroschisis
compared with a woman of age 24 with a BMI of 23. Furthermore, there was an interaction between maternal age and BMI for this risk. The increased risk of low maternal age and prepregnancy BMI associated with
gastroschisis
appears to suggest an aetiological role related to biological
immaturity
for this particular birth defect.
...
PMID:The joint effects of maternal prepregnancy body mass index and age on the risk of gastroschisis. 1922 14