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Improving health status in extremely low birthweight children between two and five years
Authors:V. Y. H. Yu    M. L. Manlapaz    J. Tobin    E. A. Carse    M. P. Charlton  J. R. Gore
Affiliation:

Department of Paediatrics, Monash Medical Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Abstract:The 5-year outcome of 101 extremely low birthweight (ELBW, < 1000 g) children discharged from the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit was reported. Over this period, there were four post-discharge deaths. The neurodevelopmental impairment rate was 18% overall: cerebral palsy 7%, blindness 3%, deafness 3% and developmental delay 10%. Seventy-one percent of children were readmitted to hospital. The mean number of admissions was 2.4 per child and the mean duration of total hospital stay was 11.3 days per child in the 5-year period. A trend was observed in a reduction in the readmission rate and hospital days in the 2–5-year period compared to the period between discharge and 2 years, though the differences were not statistically significant. The most common reason for readmission was for surgical procedures, primarily aural ventilation tube insertion and tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy. Significant health problems included recurrent wheezing episodes, stridor and croup in the period up to 2 years and otitis media and tonsillitis between 2 and 5 years. There was some catch-up growth, especially in height, between 2 and 5 years. Children with < 800 g birthweight had similar rates of neurodevelopmental impairment and hospital readmission to those of 800–999 g birthweight. However, they experienced more otitis media and pneumonia, had more ear, nose and throat operations, and at 5 years of age, more were below the 3rd centile for weight. This study showed that the health status of ELBW children had improved between 2 and 5 years, but they continued to experience recurrent health problems and hospital readmissions which would have resulted in added financial and emotional burdens to their families.
Keywords:Author Keywords: extremely low birthweight infants   growth and development   morbidity
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