Premium
Unexpected collapse of healthy newborn infants: risk factors, supervision and hypothermia treatment
Author(s) -
Pejovic Nicolas J,
Herlenius Eric
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
acta paediatrica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1651-2227
pISSN - 0803-5253
DOI - 10.1111/apa.12244
Subject(s) - medicine , pediatrics , breastfeeding , incidence (geometry) , hypothermia , apgar score , resuscitation , gestation , birth weight , pregnancy , anesthesia , physics , biology , optics , genetics
Aim To determine the occurrence and risk factors of sudden unexpected postnatal collapse ( SUPC ) in presumably healthy newborn infants. Methods All live‐born infants during a 30‐month period, in five major delivery wards in Stockholm, were screened, and possible cases of SUPC thoroughly investigated. Infants were ≥35 weeks of gestation, had an Apgar score >8 at 10 min and collapsed within 24 h after birth. Maternal, infant, event characteristics and outcome data were collected. Results Twenty‐six cases of SUPC were found among 68 364 live‐born infants, an incidence of 38/100 000 live births. Sixteen of these cases of SUPC required resuscitation with ventilation >1 min, and 14 of these remained unexplained (21/100 000). Fifteen of the 26 children were found in a prone position, during skin‐to‐skin contact, 18 were primipara, and 13 occurred during unsupervised breastfeeding at <2 h of age. Three cases occurred during smart cellular phone use by the mother. Five developed hypoxic–ischaemic encephalopathy ( HIE ) grade 2, and 4 underwent hypothermia treatment. Twenty‐five infants had a favourable neurological outcome. Conclusion SUPC in apparent healthy babies is associated with initial, unsupervised breastfeeding, prone position, primiparity and distractions. Guidelines outlining the appropriate monitoring of newborns and safe early skin‐to‐skin contact should be implemented.