ABSTRACT
Vitamin K-deficiency bleeding (VKDB) is rare, unpredictable, and life-threatening.
Warning signs such as minimal bleeds, evidence of cholestasis, and failure to thrive
often are present but overlooked. Therefore VK prophylaxis is necessary, at least
for breastfed infants. Most effective is the intramuscular application, which unfortunately
has real disadvantages (trauma, poor acceptance by parents) and potential risks due
to very high VK levels, since VK affects not only coagulation but all processes associated
with carboxylation.
Three oral doses of VK protect many babies (2-mg doses giving better protection than
1 mg) but the prevention of VKDB is not assured even with the mixed-micelle preparation.
Use of small VK doses either daily or weekly seems to give effective prophylaxis without
the adverse effects of intramuscular VK application.
The risks of VKDB are minimized if prophylaxis recommendations are followed and if
warning signs are recognized and promptly acted upon. The next goal is the search
for methods of identifying early the few infants destined to bleed so that targeted
prophylaxis can replace the current “prophylaxis for all.”
KEYWORDS
Vitamin K deficiency bleeding - hemorrhagic disease of the newborn - Vitamin K prophylaxis