Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We investigated colonization with Ureaplasma urealyticum (Uu) in infants <30 weeks gestation and assessed the relationship to other risk factors influencing respiratory morbidity, plus the effect of treatment with erythromycin. Ventilated preterm infants [n = 155; median GA 26 (23-29) weeks] were cultured for Uu in endotracheal aspirate and nasopharynx. Colonized infants were randomly assigned to treatment with erythromycin 40 mg/kg/d, intravenously or orally. The rate of colonization was 29/155 (19%) and the Uu-colonized infants had lower mean gestational ages than the culture-negative infants (25 vs 26 weeks). For the colonized infants PROM (48% vs 12%), chorioamnionitis in the mother (46% vs 17%) and vaginal delivery (71% vs 29%) were more common. More colonized infants needed supplemental oxygen at 36 weeks' postconceptual age (p < 0.05). Erythromycin treatment was effective in reducing colonization with negative control cultures in 12/14 (86%) of treated infants. No significant differences were found between the colonized treated infants (n = 14) and those not treated (n = 14) in time with supplemental oxygen. Oxygen requirement at 36 weeks was related to lower gestational age, late appearance of PDA, late onset sepsis and signs of chorioamnionitis in the mother. We conclude that the Uu colonization is related to increasing immaturity, the presence of prolonged rupture of membranes, signs of chorioamnionitis and vaginal delivery. Treatment with erythromycin reduced colonization but did not significantly alter length of time with supplemental oxygen.
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PMID:Ureaplasma urealyticum, erythromycin and respiratory morbidity in high-risk preterm neonates. 982 77

The result of the use of drugs in the newborn may be strongly influenced by the peculiar state of the neonate, characterized by the immaturity, at birth, of the processes controlling the absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion of drugs. Additional important factors that may affect drugs' bioavailability and toxicity are gestational age, birth weight, intrauterine growth restriction, gender and, especially, liver function immaturity. Because of the high susceptibility to infections, antibiotics, in particular ampicillin and gentamicin, are the most widely used drugs in newborns. Erythromycin is often used for the therapy of gastrointestinal dismotility, while azithromycin has been proposed for the prevention of bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Prostaglandin synthesis inhibitors, like indomethacin, are administered on the first days of life to close the patent ductus arteriosus. All these drugs have been proved to can give rise to hepatotoxicity. The acute and chronic liver toxicity due to the most widely used drugs in the neonates will be here reviewed.
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PMID:Hepatic injury to the newborn liver due to drugs. 2256 99