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The Administration of 100% Oxygen and Respiratory Drive in Very Preterm Infants at Birth

AIM: To retrospectively investigate the changes of SpO(2) and respiratory drive in preterm infants at birth after administration of 100% oxygen. METHODS: Respiratory parameters, FiO(2) and oximetry of infants <32 weeks gestation before and after receiving FiO(2) 1.0 were reviewed during continuou...

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Autores principales: van Vonderen, Jeroen J., Narayen, Nadia E., Walther, Frans J., Siew, Melissa L., Davis, Peter G., Hooper, Stuart B., te Pas, Arjan B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3799887/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24204698
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076898
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author van Vonderen, Jeroen J.
Narayen, Nadia E.
Walther, Frans J.
Siew, Melissa L.
Davis, Peter G.
Hooper, Stuart B.
te Pas, Arjan B.
author_facet van Vonderen, Jeroen J.
Narayen, Nadia E.
Walther, Frans J.
Siew, Melissa L.
Davis, Peter G.
Hooper, Stuart B.
te Pas, Arjan B.
author_sort van Vonderen, Jeroen J.
collection PubMed
description AIM: To retrospectively investigate the changes of SpO(2) and respiratory drive in preterm infants at birth after administration of 100% oxygen. METHODS: Respiratory parameters, FiO(2) and oximetry of infants <32 weeks gestation before and after receiving FiO(2) 1.0 were reviewed during continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) or positive pressure ventilation (PPV). RESULTS: Results are given as median (IQR) or percentages where appropriate. Suitable recordings were made in 50 infants (GA 27 (26–29) weeks), 17 received CPAP and 33 PPV. SpO(2) increased rapidly in the first minute after FiO(2) 1.0 and remained stable. The duration of FiO(2) 1.0 tended to be shorter in the CPAP group than in the PPV group (CPAP vs. PPV: 65 (33–105) vs. 100 (40–280) s; p = 0.05), SpO(2) >95% occurred more often in PPV group (53% vs. 69%) and lasted longer (70(40–95) vs. 120(50–202) s). In CPAP group, minute volume increased from 134 (76–265) mL/kg/min 1 minute before to 240 (157–370) mL/kg/min (p<0.01) 1 minute after start FiO(2) 1.0 and remained stable at 2 minutes (252 (135–376) mL/kg/min; ns). The rate of rise to maximum tidal volume increased (from 13.8 (8.0–22.4) mL/kg/s to 18.2 (11.0–27.5) mL/kg/s; p<0.0001) to 18.8 (11.8–27.8) mL/kg/s; ns). In the PPV group respiratory rate increased from 0(0–4) to 9(0–20) at 1 minute (p<0.001) to 23 (0–34) breaths per minute at 2 minutes (p<0.01). CONCLUSION: In preterm infants at birth, a rapid increase in oxygenation, resulting from a transient increase to 100% oxygen might improve respiratory drive, but increases the risk for hyperoxia.
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spelling pubmed-37998872013-11-07 The Administration of 100% Oxygen and Respiratory Drive in Very Preterm Infants at Birth van Vonderen, Jeroen J. Narayen, Nadia E. Walther, Frans J. Siew, Melissa L. Davis, Peter G. Hooper, Stuart B. te Pas, Arjan B. PLoS One Research Article AIM: To retrospectively investigate the changes of SpO(2) and respiratory drive in preterm infants at birth after administration of 100% oxygen. METHODS: Respiratory parameters, FiO(2) and oximetry of infants <32 weeks gestation before and after receiving FiO(2) 1.0 were reviewed during continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) or positive pressure ventilation (PPV). RESULTS: Results are given as median (IQR) or percentages where appropriate. Suitable recordings were made in 50 infants (GA 27 (26–29) weeks), 17 received CPAP and 33 PPV. SpO(2) increased rapidly in the first minute after FiO(2) 1.0 and remained stable. The duration of FiO(2) 1.0 tended to be shorter in the CPAP group than in the PPV group (CPAP vs. PPV: 65 (33–105) vs. 100 (40–280) s; p = 0.05), SpO(2) >95% occurred more often in PPV group (53% vs. 69%) and lasted longer (70(40–95) vs. 120(50–202) s). In CPAP group, minute volume increased from 134 (76–265) mL/kg/min 1 minute before to 240 (157–370) mL/kg/min (p<0.01) 1 minute after start FiO(2) 1.0 and remained stable at 2 minutes (252 (135–376) mL/kg/min; ns). The rate of rise to maximum tidal volume increased (from 13.8 (8.0–22.4) mL/kg/s to 18.2 (11.0–27.5) mL/kg/s; p<0.0001) to 18.8 (11.8–27.8) mL/kg/s; ns). In the PPV group respiratory rate increased from 0(0–4) to 9(0–20) at 1 minute (p<0.001) to 23 (0–34) breaths per minute at 2 minutes (p<0.01). CONCLUSION: In preterm infants at birth, a rapid increase in oxygenation, resulting from a transient increase to 100% oxygen might improve respiratory drive, but increases the risk for hyperoxia. Public Library of Science 2013-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3799887/ /pubmed/24204698 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076898 Text en © 2013 van Vonderen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
van Vonderen, Jeroen J.
Narayen, Nadia E.
Walther, Frans J.
Siew, Melissa L.
Davis, Peter G.
Hooper, Stuart B.
te Pas, Arjan B.
The Administration of 100% Oxygen and Respiratory Drive in Very Preterm Infants at Birth
title The Administration of 100% Oxygen and Respiratory Drive in Very Preterm Infants at Birth
title_full The Administration of 100% Oxygen and Respiratory Drive in Very Preterm Infants at Birth
title_fullStr The Administration of 100% Oxygen and Respiratory Drive in Very Preterm Infants at Birth
title_full_unstemmed The Administration of 100% Oxygen and Respiratory Drive in Very Preterm Infants at Birth
title_short The Administration of 100% Oxygen and Respiratory Drive in Very Preterm Infants at Birth
title_sort administration of 100% oxygen and respiratory drive in very preterm infants at birth
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3799887/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24204698
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076898
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