Am J Perinatol 1999; 16(1): 7-11
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-993828
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

© 1999 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.

Variations in Regional Cerebral Blood Volume in Neonates Associated with Nursery Care Events

Roy E. Gagnon, Andy Leung, Andrew J. Macnab
  • Department of Paediatrics, Children's and Women's Health Centre of British Columbia, BC, Canada
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
04 March 2008 (online)

ABSTRACT

This pilot study investigated the frequency of events that cause cerebral oxygenation disturbances in ventilator-dependant neonates in the neonatal intensive care unit. Continuous, noninvasive, near infrared spectrophotometry measurements (changes in oxy and deoxy hemoglobin concentration, and cytochrome C oxidase redox status) were made at half-second intervals on 10 ventilator-dependent neonates (30.5 weeks average corrected gestation age, 1051 g average weight) and annotated to nursery events at the bedside. Examples of disturbances affecting cerebral oxygenation were opening incubator doors, handling, heel stabs, conversation, blanket tucking, and steno-paging. These events produced 7-40% changes in blood volume for durations of 5-60 sec, and occurred at a rate of up to 45 events within a 2 hr period. Spectrometry detected 63% more events than were observed and documented clinically. Noninvasive monitoring of cerebral oxygenation status could give new insight into managing the high-risk infant environment.

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