AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed growth patterns in 288 preterm infants, focusing on factors that affect catch-up growth at various corrected ages up to 24 months.
  • At 24 months, only a small percentage of infants had significantly low z-scores for growth metrics like head circumference, length, and weight, with SGA infants showing worse outcomes compared to non-SGA infants.
  • Factors influencing growth differed across corrected ages, with the impact of early hospitalization factors decreasing as the infants matured.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to describe the growth pattern in preterm infants and identify factors influencing catch-up growth. A total of 288 preterm infants were divided into groups based on the degree of prematurity, sex, and size for gestational age. Growth in head circumference, length, weight-for-length, and weight was compared between groups at corrected age of 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to determine risk factors for catch-up growth. At a corrected age of 24 months, the proportions of preterm infants with z-scores less than -2 for head circumference, length, weight-for-length, and weight were less than the expected 2.3% at 0.9%, 1.7%, 2.1%, and 1.7%, respectively. The head circumference, length, weight-for-length, and weight z-scores at corrected ages of 24 months were lower in the small for gestational age (SGA) group than in the non-SGA group ( < .05). The weight-for-length z-scores were higher in the late preterm birth infants than in the very preterm birth infants at a corrected age of 24 months ( < .05). At a corrected age 24 months, the proportion of male with weight z-scores <-2 was lower than that of female ( < .05). The differences in proportion of the z-scores (head circumference, length, weight-for-length, and weight) <-2 at a corrected age of 24 months among different gestational age groups and intrauterine growth status groups were not statistically significant ( > .05). We found that the factors influencing catch-up growth in preterm infants varied at different corrected age stages, and the impact of factors during hospitalization gradually diminished as the infants grew.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00099228241289739DOI Listing

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