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Hypoglycemic brain injury
Institution:1. Innovative Neonatal and Infant Feeding Disorders Research Program, Center for Perinatal Research, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children''s Hospital, Columbus, OH;2. Department of Pediatrics, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, OH;3. Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, Nationwide Children''s Hospital, Columbus, OH;4. Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Sleep Laboratory, Nationwide Children''s Hospital, Columbus, OH;5. Division of Neonatology, Nationwide Children''s Hospital, Columbus, OH;1. Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, KU Leuven–University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;2. Department of Congenital and Structural Cardiology, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;3. Department of Public Health and Primary Care, KU Leuven–University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;4. Institute of Health and Care Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Sweden;5. Department of Cardiac Surgery, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;6. Department of Paediatrics, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
Abstract:Hypoglycemia frequently occurs in newborn infants who previously have suffered asphyxia, who are offspring of diabetic mothers, or who are low birthweight for gestational age (IUGR). Many infants who are hypoglycemic do not exhibit clinical manifestations, while others are symptomatic and at risk for the occurrence of permanent brain damage. This review emphasizes the clinical, neuropathologic, and neuro-imaging features of hypoglycemia in newborn infants, especially those who are symptomatic. Neurologic morbidity occurs particularly in those infants who have suffered severe, protracted, or recurrent symptomatic hypoglycemia. Experimental observations emphasize the resistance of the immature brain to the damaging effect of hypoglycemia; such resistance occurs as a consequence of compensatory increases in cerebral blood flow, lower energy requirements, higher endogenous carbohydrate stores, and an ability to incorporate and consume alternative organic substrates to spare glucose for energy production. Hypoglycemia combined with hypoxia-ischemia (asphyxia) is more deleterious to the immature brain than either condition alone.
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