This study examined the association between Ureaplasma urealyticum colonization and the development of chronic lung disease (CLD) in 93 premature infants who were treated with surfactant and who had birth weights < 1251 g. Nasopharyngeal and tracheal cultures for U. urealyticum were obtained at 2 +/- 1 and at 14 +/- 1 days after birth and were positive in 17 (18%) of 93 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe treated nine infants who unexpectedly developed shock, seizures, and fever, followed by diarrhea, consumption coagulopathy, and hepatorenal dysfunction. Despite vigorous treatment, three infants died and all except one of the six survivors have severe residual neurologic abnormalities. Postmortem findings included cerebral edema, white matter petechial hemorrhages, gastrointestinal hemorrhages, and fatty liver.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo cases of symptomatic neonatal hepatic arteriovenous malformation (AVM) are presented. Both were treated with percutaneous transcatheter embolization and a commercially available polyvinyl alcohol suspension. Both infants died soon after AVM embolization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have developed a kinetic immunonephelometric method for the determination of retinol-binding protein and modified the method of Jacob et al (Clin Chem 1983; 29: 564) for the determination of transthyretin (prealbumin) in neonatal serum specimens from small, premature infants. The methodologies allow detection of 17.5 mg/l transthyretin and 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncreased intracranial pressure developed as a terminal event in a 5-year-old boy with adrenoleukodystrophy. The CSF protein concentration was 420 mg/dL. Computed tomography showed extensive areas of decreased density in the posterior cerebral white matter.
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