PREDICTORS OF CONTINUOUS POSITIVE AIRWAY PRESSURE FAILURE IN PRETERM INFANTS WITH EARLY ONSET RESPIRATORY DISTRESS | ||||
ALEXMED ePosters | ||||
Article 3, Volume 4, Issue 2, June 2022, Page 28-29 | ||||
Document Type: Preliminary preprint short reports of original research | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/alexpo.2022.142764.1417 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Authors | ||||
Hesham Ghazal1; marwa farag2; Bahaa Salah Hammad3; Ibtesam Said Ahmed Mahmoud Zaghloul 2 | ||||
1pediatrics, Alexandria faculty of medicine, Alexandria, Egypt | ||||
2Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria University, Egypt | ||||
3Department of pediatric , Alexandria university . Faculty of medicine | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Introduction Preterm neonates are at high risk of developing respiratory distress (RD) in the immediate post-natal period. Traditionally, these infants are managed by intubation and mechanical ventilation. The risks of mechanical ventilation to premature lungs are well known. Even a brief exposure to large volume breaths can initiate an inflammatory cascade leading to bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). Avoiding intubation in the delivery room and stabilization with nasal continuous positive airway pressure (NCPAP) improves outcomes. Recently, use of CPAP is becoming the first-line treatment in preterm infants at birth, reducing the need for mechanical ventilation and surfactant replacement. However, NCPAP failure rates remain unacceptably high, with many newborns requiring secondary mechanical ventilation as well as delayed surfactant administration, with increased risk of mortality and major morbidity. Several reports have suggested that NCPAP failure is associated with a higher risk of adverse outcomes, including pneumothorax, BPD and intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH), than the group for whom NCPAP successfully avoids intubation. Identifying infants at risk for NCPAP failure could help target early interventions to avoid intubation and MV. Several factors associated with NCPAP failure have been proposed in the literature, mainly lower gestational age, birth weight, oxygenation parameters in the first hours of life and the presence of severe respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) on the initial chest radiograph. However, there is still a need to evaluate the modifiable risk factors that result in NCPAP failure. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
RESPIRATORY DISTRESS; prematurity; NCPAP | ||||
Supplementary Files
|
||||
Statistics Article View: 64 |
||||