View clinical trials related to Hyperbilirubinemia, Neonatal.
Filter by:Prospective comparison of measurement of bilirubin in jaundiced newborns by a transcutaneous device (bilirubinometer) and laboratory analysis of blood samples. We hypothesise that correlation of the two measurements depend on bilirubin level, gestational age as well as postnatal age.
Objective: To develop an evidence-based strategy for assessing the risk of significant hyperbilirubinemia in healthy term and near-term (late-preterm) neonates. Hypothesis: A stepwise strategy which combines clinical parameters and serial non-invasive transcutaneous bilirubin (TcB) values could reliably predict significant neonatal hyperbilirubinemia. Methods: Data from neonates >34 weeks' gestation included in the registry for neonatal hyperbilirubinemia of the well-baby nursery of the University Hospital of Patras, from January 2008 to December 2010 will be reviewed. The registry includes prospectively collected data such as sex, gestational age, gestation and perinatal information, mother's and infant's ABO group and Rh, G6PD deficiency, Coombs test, type of delivery and complications, birthweight, postnatal medications and interventions, type and volume of feeding (daily), extension of jaundice, TcB measurements at intervals of 12+/-4 hours until discharge, total serum bilirubin values (if obtained), TcB or TSB measurements at follow-up, weight at discharge, need of phototherapy (inpatient or after discharge). TcB and TSB values are plotted on a hour-specific chart. A novel predictive nomogram based on TcB measurements (Varvarigou et al. Pediatrics 2009;124:1052-9) will be used to classify TcB values as high, intermediate, and low risk. Significant hyperbilirubinemia will be defined as a TSB value above the phototherapy threshold level according to the AAP 2004 guidelines Statistics: Independent and joint effects of various clinical factors on the development of significant hyperbilirubinemia will be evaluated by logistic regression analysis Cluster analysis and Chi-squared Automatic Interaction Detection (CHAID) tree method will be used to develop the strategy. At each step, CHAID chooses the independent (predictor) variable that has the strongest interaction with the dependent variable. Categories of each predictor are merged if they are not significantly different with respect to the dependent variable.
The purpose of this research study is to more accurately measure the amount of true red blood cell breakdown (hemolysis) in newborn babies with potentially problematic blood type mismatch with their mothers (ABO incompatibility), and to examine how the true level of red blood cell destruction relates to other laboratory tests obtained in newborns with jaundice. A better understanding of the true amount of red blood cell destruction that is caused by blood type mismatch, as well as how it relates with other laboratory tests ordered for ABO incompatibility and red blood cell destruction, would help avoid unnecessary testing, treatment and prolonged hospital stays in such babies.
It is a normal process in the human body for red blood cells to die, which makes bilirubin. Bilirubin is cleared away through the liver. Some babies are born with livers that don't work well enough yet, or their red blood cells are dying too fast, so the baby looks yellow (jaundice). This means there is too much bilirubin in the body. It can be dangerous if a baby's bilirubin gets too high. Phototherapy is what they call the lights they shine on newborn babies to help the liver get rid of bilirubin. This study tests an experimental drug to see if it can reduce how much bilirubin is being made in the first place.
We will use information technology to integrate the 2004 American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for management of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia with laboratory reporting of newborn bilirubin test results to improve physician adherence to the guidelines and quality of care.
The oxygen tension increases more than 3 times from fetus to neonate. The oxidant stress happens. And it will cause the destruction of RBC. So, we propose that the ROS may play an important role of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia. There is strong association between the bilirubin level and ROS levels at 3 days old in our pilot study.
In this, here we want to present a new method for analysis variation in gene copy number for patients and carriers of SMA. This is a relative quantitation method and, therefore, relies on the inclusion of one or more internal control or reference sequences; quantitation of DNA is relative to this reference sequence of known copy number. A peak height from within a potentially duplicated or deleted target region is amplified simultaneously with a disomic reference region in a multiplex PCR system.
This multi-center, randomized clinical trial compared different bilirubin levels as thresholds for timing of phototherapy in extremely low birth weight infants. The primary hypothesis was that there would be no difference in death or neurodevelopmental impairment at 18-22 months corrected age in infants treated by either aggressive or conservative threshold limits. 1,978 infants were enrolled.
OBJECTIVES: I. Compare the efficacy of preventive vs. therapeutic tin mesoporphyrin in direct Coombs' test-positive ABO hemolytic disease of the newborn and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency in infants living in Greece. II. Assess the safety of tin mesoporphyrin in high-risk newborns.