View clinical trials related to Neonatal Respiratory Distress.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to determine the effect of administering antenatal steroids in term fetuses on the blood flow in the fetal pulmonary artery, and to correlate these findings with clinical data obtained after birth documenting respiratory disorders.
Respiratory distress is the main cause of morbimortality in preterm and term neonates. In most of the case, these babies required the use of positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) delivered by a non invasive device. Nasal continuous airway positive pressure (nCPAP) is widely used in neonatal intensive care unit. Nasal high frequency percussive ventilation (nHFPV) can be used as non invasive device to deliver PEEP, and improved lung clearance. We hypothesized that nHFPV can be used to deliver PEEP in preterm and term newborn with respiratory distress with the same tolerance as nCPAP. To compare the tolerance of these devices we used cerebral tissue oxygenation (rSO2c) measured by near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS).
There is a need for a biochemical marker in addition to clinical condition which will help the physician to understand the clinical progress of the disease. Urine Nt-proBNP, which does not need any blood sampling and can be collected easily, has not been evaluated for respiratory distress in newborn. The investigators aim to evaluate the prognostic value of urine NT-proBNP in respiratory diseases in newborns by a controlled trial.