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SOME ASPECTS IN Neonatal Management

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SOME ASPECTS IN Neonatal Management BY: RUBANA BAABBAD MD CONSULTANT NEONATOLOGIST – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SOME ASPECTS IN Neonatal Management


1
SOME ASPECTS IN Neonatal Management
  • BY
  • RUBANA BAABBAD MD
  • CONSULTANT NEONATOLOGIST

2
Contents
  • Resuscitation
  • APGAR Score
  • Management of Premature Infant
  • Management of Infant Diabetic Mother
  • Premature vs dysmature

3
Delivery Room Resuscitation
  • ANTICIPATION RECOGNITION OF NEONATE IN
    DISTRESS
  • Primary Apnea due to brief hypoxia
  • Recovers with stimulation and oxygen supplement.
  • Secondary Apneawith prolonged hypoxia.
  • Requires assisted ventilation and oxygen.
  • Assume all times that it is secondary and
    resuscitate immediately.

4
Goals of Resuscitation
  • 1) Minimizing Immediate Heat Loss
  • 2) Establishing Normal Respiration and Lung
    Expansion
  • 3) Increasing Arterial PO2
  • 4) Supporting Adequate Cardiac Output

5
STEPS FOR EFFECTIVE RESUSCITATION
  • Preparationpediatric team should be present
  • a)identify high risk deliveries fetal
    distress,fetal disease or serious conditions like
    meconium,prematurity,post- maturity abnormal
    fetal wt.,major anomalies,hydrops,multiple
    gestation, cord prolapse,abruptio placentae.
  • Labor delivery conditions like
  • APH.,abnormal presentation,difficult labor

6
NO PEDIATRIC TEAM REQUIREDPERSONNEL FOR
EVALUATION neonatal conditions unexpected
congenital anomalies,respiatory
distress,unanticipated neonatal
depression.Maternal conditionssigns of
maternal infectionmaternal illness
e.g.DM,isoimmunization,PET,renal,endocrine,
pulmonary,or cardiac disease.
7
NESSESARY EQUIPMENT
  1. Radiant warmer
  2. Oxygen source
  3. Self inflating bag with reservoir or anesthesia
    bag
  4. Face mask with appropriate size
  5. Suction
  6. Stethoscope
  7. Emergency box laryngoscope, batteries ET.
    Tubes,drugsepinephrin(110000),NaHco3 4.2,
    Naloxon, albumin, and NaCL 0.9
  8. Umbilical catheterization tray
  9. Syringes, needles, t-connectors, and stopcocks
  10. Transport incubator with batteries
  11. Pulse oximetry

8
Begin a process of evaluation,decision,and action.
  • Place on warm table
  • Dry discard the wet linensextra warming
  • Positioning
  • Suction the mouth, oropharynx, and nares (avoid
    deep pharyngeal suction

9
EVALUATIONACTION
  • Evaluate for
  • color cyanosed ------oxygen
  • Respiratory distress signs?
  • Indications of bag and mask ventilation apnea,
    HRlt 100
  • Rate, press, technique
  • indication for intubation, ET size suction
    catheter sizes.

10
TUBE SIZE
Wt.of infant ETsize Suction catheter size
lt1000 gm 2.5 5-6 fr
1000 -2000 gm 3 6
2000 3000 gm 3.5 8
gt3000 gm 4 8
11
CHEST COMPRESSIONS
  • Indications if after 15-30 sec of ve press
    ventilation 100 O2 HRlt60 / 60-80 bpm not ?
  • Technique 1 finger breadth below nipple line,
    using 2 fingers compress 1-2 cm 90\ min ratio 31
    cc to vent.

12
Medications used for resuscitation
  • Indications
  • Bradycardia with HR lt 80 BPM despite adequate
    ventilation with 100 O2 and chest compression
    for mini. Of 30 sec or HR0
  • Epinephrine
  • Volume expanders
  • Naloxone hydrochloride
  • NaHCO3

13
Dosage Chart
Epinephrine 0.10.3 ml/kg 110,000
Volume expander 10 ml/kg NS./albumin,RL./BLD
NaHCO3 2mEq/kg 0.5 mEq/ml
Naloxone Hydrochlori-de 0.1mg/kg 1mg/ml or 0.4 mg/ml
14
Special resuscitation efforts
  • Meconium present at delivary
  • Diaphragmatic hernia

15
APGAR SCORE
  • DEFINITION an assessment of the newborns
    physical condition immediately after birth
    involve HR,respiratory effort,color, muscle tone
    reflex.
  • Devised in 1952 by VERGINIA APGAR the American
    anasthatologist
  • The score range from 1-10
  • Calculated at 15 min. if lt7 to be repeated
    every 5 min.up to 20 min.

16
Apgar scoring system
sign 0 1 2
HR absent lt 100 bpm gt 100bpm
Resp.effort absent Slow/ irregular Good crying
Muscle tone limp Some flexion of the extremities Active motion
Reflex irritability No response grimace Cough/ sneeze
color Blue/pale Pink body,blue extremities All pink
17
Definition of dysmaturity
  • 1. Characteristic of faulty embryologic
    development, often leading to structural and/or
    functional abnormalities.
  • 2. Relating to or characteristic of an infant
    whose birth weight is inappropriately low for its
    gestational age

18
Premature vs. Dysmature
  • gt 20wks.lt 37 weeks
  • Incomplete organ system development
  • thin shiny skin,extended arms and legs,little
    subcutanous fat,spase hair few palmar and sole
    creases,poorly developed ear cartilage ,genitalia
    boys few rugae undescended testicles- girls
    gaping labia prominent clitoris
  • postmaturity syndrome  a syndrome due to
    placental insufficiency that causes chronic
    stress and hypoxia, seen in fetuses and neonates
    in postterm pregnancies, characterized by
    decreased subcutaneous fat, skin desquamation,
    and long fingernails, often with yellow meconium
    staining of the nails, skin, and vernix.

19
The Premature infant
  • The premature infant is quickly transferred from
    the warm fluid medium of the liquor amnii with
    its practically constant temperature to the
    variable circumstances of an extrauterine life
    he/she loses the preparatory transition-time of
    the third trimester of intrauterine existence .

20
Problems of prematurity
  • Thermoregulation
  • Respiratory distress
  • Apnea
  • Sepsis
  • poor sucking swallowing reflex
  • Neurologic
  • Cvs
  • Hematologic
  • Nutritional
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Metabolic
  • Renal
  • Immunologic
  • opthalmologic

21
Management of premature infants
  • Thermal regulation
  • O2 therapy assissted ventilation
  • PDA
  • Fluid electrolite management
  • Nutrition
  • Hyperbilirubinemia
  • Infection
  • immunization

22
Management of infants of diabetic mothers
  • Evaluation before delivery size, pulmonary
    maturity, obvious anomalies
  • After delivery Apgar score, physical examination
    for major congenital anomalies
  • In the nursery continuous evaluation repeat the
    examination, monitor blood glucose, hematocrit,
    calcium bilirubin levels.
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