Background: Although not universal, active care is being offered to infants weighing < 500 g at birth, referred to as ultra-low birth weight (ULBW) infants appropriate for gestational age. These infants have the greatest risk of dying or developing major morbidities. ULBW infants face challenges related to fluid and heat loss as well as skin injury in the initial days of life from extreme anatomical and physiological immaturity of the skin. Although there is an emerging literature on the outcomes of ULBW infants, there is a paucity of evidence to inform practice guidelines for delivering optimal care to this cohort of infants.

Data Sources: A comprehensive review of the literature was performed using the PubMed and Embase databases. Searched keywords included "thermoregulation or body temperature regulation", "incubator humidity", "skin care", "infant, extremely low birth weight" and "ultra-low birth weight infants".

Results: Evidences for thermoregulation, incubator humidity, and skincare practices are available for preterm infants weighing < 1500 g at birth but not specifically for ULBW infants. Studies on thermoregulation, incubator humidity, or skincare practices had a small sample size and did not include a sub-group analysis for ULBW infants. Current practice recommendations in ULBW infants are adopted from research in very and/or extremely low birth weight infants.

Conclusions: This narrative review focuses on challenges in thermoregulation, incubator humidity, and skincare practices in ULBW infants, highlights current research gaps and suggests potential developments for informing practices for improving health outcomes in ULBW infants. Video abstract (MP4 1,49,115 kb).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11269412PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12519-024-00818-xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

thermoregulation incubator
4
incubator humidity
4
humidity skincare
4
skincare practices
4
practices appropriate
4
appropriate gestational
4
gestational age
4
age ultra-low
4
ultra-low birth
4
birth weight
4

Similar Publications

The objective of this study was to evaluate the influence of thermal manipulation during incubation on the hatchability, the performance, the carcass characteristics, the intestinal villi, the nutrient metabolizability, and some physiological parameters in broiler chickens. Ross eggs were randomly distributed into four commercial automatic incubators. The treatments were as follows: incubator kept at 37.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: The purpose of this study is to compare the effects of two different ways of stopping incubator humidification on episodes of hypothermia, hyperthermia, hyponatraemia, hypernatraemia, or skin injury. The design is a single site, two-armed, parallel, randomised, clinical trial conducted between April 2019 and March 2022. The setting was a quaternary referral and teaching hospital in Queensland, Australia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The mechanisms underlying individual differences in core body temperature (T) are unexplained by genetic factors and poorly understood. Here, we investigated whether the environmental temperature during early development affects postnatal T. Mouse embryos were cultured from pronuclear to blastocyst stage in either standard (37 °C) or high (38 °C) temperature, and the T of each grown-up adult was measured.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ethnopharmacological Significance: The therapeutic efficacy of Ershen Zhenwu Decoction (ESZWD)-a famous formulation from Xin'an for patients with chronic heart failure heart-kidney Yang deficiency (CHF-HKYD)-is well established. Still, the underlying molecular mechanism is not clear.

Aim Of The Study: This study investigated mechanisms by which ESZWD suppresses cardiac pathology, including myocardial fibrosis, in CHF-HKYD model rats and Ang II-stimulated cardiac fibroblasts (CFs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Evidence of seasonal heat acclimatisation in recreationally active adults during a mild summer.

J Sci Med Sport

October 2023

Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Science (UCRISE), University of Canberra, Australia. Electronic address:

Objectives: To assess the magnitude of seasonal heat acclimatisation in recreationally active adults and contextualise the process by documenting the factors that influence adaptations.

Design: Longitudinal, repeated measures design.

Methods: Seventeen (7 females) recreationally active adults (28 ± 8 yr, V̇O 54 ± 8 mL·kg·min) exercising outdoors a minimum of 5 h·wk completed a 45-min heat response test running at 60 % V̇O in 40 °C and 30 % relative humidity prior to, midway through, and following summer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!