PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Babies born at 37 and 38 weeks are at higher risk for adverse health outcomes

These 'early-term' babies are more likely to experience low blood sugar or to require respiratory support and they were at additional risk if born by cesarean section

2013-10-02
(Press-News.org) BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Babies considered "early-term," born at 37 or 38 weeks after a mother's last menstrual period, may look as healthy as full-term babies born at 39-41 weeks, but a new study published by University at Buffalo physicians in JAMA Pediatrics has found that many of them are not.

The study is considered the first population-based, countywide assessment of neonatal morbidity among early-term infants based on individual medical records in the U.S.

"Our results show the need for an increased awareness among health care providers that even though we consider babies born at 37 or 38 weeks almost term, they are still, to a large extent, physiologically immature," says Shaon Sengupta, MD, corresponding author and formerly a UB medical resident in the Department of Pediatrics and Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo. She is currently doing a neonatal-perinatal medicine fellowship at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

The UB researchers found that these early-term babies were at significantly higher risk for adverse outcomes. They also found that birth by elective cesarean section pushed those risks even higher, from 9.7 percent risk of admission to neonatal intensive care with vaginal deliveries to 19 percent following cesarean section.

The research covered nearly 30,000 live births in Erie County (which includes the city of Buffalo) from Jan. 1, 2006 through Dec. 31, 2008.

In an accompanying editorial, William Oh of Brown University and Tonse N. K. Raju of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, said that the findings "…have important implications for obstetric and neonatal care and research. The findings reinforce the concept that maturation is a continuum and any preset gestational age cannot be assumed to provide a clear separation between immaturity and mature."

The study was precipitated by observations among neonatologists that babies born at 37 or 38 weeks had more adverse health outcomes than those born at 39 to 41 weeks, according to Satyan Lakshminrusimha, MD, senior author on the study, associate professor of pediatrics in the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and chief, division of neonatology at Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo. He has worked in the hospital's Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) since 1996.

"We were seeing a significant number of infants born at 37 weeks who looked big and pretty healthy, but who, within a few hours of birth were developing low blood sugar, difficulty in breathing or needed antibiotics, necessitating admission to the neonatal intensive care unit," says Lakshminrusimha.

After evaluating admission patterns among newborn infants between 37 and 41 weeks of gestation at Women and Children's Hospital, Lakshminrusimha, Sengupta and colleagues found that these early-term infants were more likely to suffer some morbidity within a few hours of birth.

To see if these patterns were valid in a wider population, they undertook the larger, county-wide study, conducting an analysis of births at Women and Children's, Millard Fillmore Suburban, Sisters of Charity Hospital and Mercy Hospital, located either in the city of Buffalo or its nearby suburbs.

These data showed similar patterns. Adverse outcomes experienced by the early term babies included hypoglycemia (4.9 percent versus 2.5 percent of full-term babies), admission to the neonatal intensive care unit (8.8 percent versus 5.3 percent, the need for respiratory support (2.0 percent versus 1.1 percent), the need for intravenous fluids (7.5 percent versus 4.4 percent) intravenous antibiotics (2.6 percent versus 1.6 percent) and mechanical ventilation or intubation, which was required in .6 percent of early term babies versus .1 percent in full-term babies.

"Although these early term babies appeared to be mature, providing a false assurance to clinical providers and parents, and they did well on the Apgar scores, they are nevertheless physiologically immature," notes Lakshminrusimha.

The data revealed, for example, that twice as many of these early term babies needed mechanical ventilation and the need for lung surfactant use was seven times higher than in term babies.

The data also show that early term babies delivered by cesarean section were at a higher risk -- by 12.2 percent -- for admission to the NICU compared with full-term babies and at 7.5 percent higher risk for morbidity compared with term births.

In particular, the study points out that cesarean delivery is a strong predictor of neonatal morbidity at early-term gestation. Lakshminrusimha notes that the need for respiratory support is increased for babies delivered by cesarean section who may retain their fetal lung fluid, since they do not experience the hormonal changes of labor, which clear the fluid from the lungs.

Sengupta launched the study as a UB medical resident in pediatrics under Lakshminrusimha's mentorship. While small research projects are typically undertaken by medical residents, Sengupta was capable of a larger study due to her motivation, Lakshminrusimha says, and because she came to the UB residency program with a Master's in Public Health from Johns Hopkins University.



INFORMATION:

Additional co-authors are: Vivien Carrion, MD, associate professor of pediatrics at UB and director of the Neonatal Transport Team at Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo; James Shelton, clinical assistant professor in the UB Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics; Ralph J. Wynn, MD, associate professor of pediatrics at UB; Rita M. Ryan, MD, formerly professor of pediatrics at UB (currently chair of pediatrics at Medical University of South Carolina) and Kamal Singhal, MD, neonatologist at Sisters of Charity Hospital. The research was funded by UB's Division of Neonatology, UB's Thomas F. Frawley MD Residency Research Fellowship Fund and an American Academy of Pediatrics Resident Research Grant.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Like father, not like son

2013-10-02
The song of songbirds is a learned, complex behavior and subject to strong selective forces. However, it is difficult to tease apart the influence of the genetic background and the environment on the expression of individual variation in song. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen in collaboration with international researchers now compared song and brain structure of parents and offspring in zebra finches that have been raised either with their genetic or foster parents. They also varied the amount of food during breeding. Remarkably, both ...

Radiofrequency ablation effectively treats Barrett's esophagus

2013-10-02
Bethesda, MD -- Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) leads to remission for 91 percent of patients with dysplastic Barrett's esophagus, according to new figures published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the official clinical practice journal of the American Gastroenterological Association. Dysplastic Barrett's esophagus is the most serious grade of the condition in which precancerous cells are detected in the esophagus. "In order to make appropriate informed decisions about the use of radiofrequency ablation, patients and providers need to be well versed in the ...

Peculiar, diverse and dangerous to crops: A checklist of the scale insects of Iran

2013-10-02
A detailed annotated checklist of the scale insects of Iran, describing a total of 275 species from 13 families, represents a first effort towards a better knowledge of the Coccoidea family in attempt to improve the view in practical fields such as pest control management. The scale insects species are listed along with their locality data and host plants. In addition to latest species names for any record, new records for Iran and new host plants for some scale insects species. The study was published in the open access journal Zookeys. Scale insects of the superfamily ...

Graphene with aroma

2013-10-02
This news release is available in German. Graphene, a crystal composed of only one layer of carbon atoms arranged in a regular hexagon, is regarded as a material which is believed to be capable of performing miracles, in particular in the fields of electronics, sensor technology and display technology, but also in metrology. Only four years after the first successful preparation of graphene, its discoverers Geim and Novoselov were therefore awarded a Nobel Prize. As the original preparation method (flaking of single atomic layers of graphite) does not offer a good ...

Early mammal varieties declined as flowering plants radiated

2013-10-02
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- The dramatic explosion of flowering plant species that occurred about 100 million years ago was thought to have been good news for evolving mammals, providing them with new options for food and habitat. But research by geologists at Indiana University Bloomington suggests that wasn't necessarily the case. In a study published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, David Grossnickle and P. David Polly present evidence that mammal varieties declined during the great angiosperm radiation of the mid-Cretaceous, a time when a great diversity ...

Discovery of charged droplets could lead to more efficient power plants

2013-10-02
CAMBRIDGE, Mass-- In a completely unexpected finding, MIT researchers have discovered that tiny water droplets that form on a superhydrophobic surface, and then "jump" away from that surface, carry an electric charge. The finding could lead to more efficient power plants and a new way of drawing power from the atmosphere, they say. The finding is reported in a paper in the journal Nature Communications written by MIT postdoc Nenad Miljkovic, mechanical engineering professor Evelyn Wang, and two others. Miljkovic says this was an extension of previous work by the MIT ...

Research shows genetic anti-inflammatory defect predisposes children to lymphoma

2013-10-02
(WASHINGTON, October 2, 2013) – New research shows that children with an inherited genetic defect in a critical anti-inflammatory pathway have a genetic predisposition to lymphoma. Results of the study, published online today in Blood, the Journal of the American Society of Hematology (ASH), reveal an important association between the genetic defect, which causes chronic intestinal inflammation and early onset inflammatory bowel disease, and its role in cancer development in infants and children. Among the hundreds of signaling pathways in the human immune system that ...

New method allows quantitative nanoscopic imaging through silicon

2013-10-02
A team of scientists from The University of Texas at Arlington and MIT has figured out how to quantitatively observe cellular processes taking place on so-called "lab on a chip" devices in a silicon environment. The new technology will be useful in drug development as well as disease diagnosis, researchers say. In a paper published in Nature's online journal Scientific Reports, the team said it overcame past limitations on quantitative microscopy through an opaque media by working with a new combination of near infrared light and a technique called quantitative phase ...

New imaging system can help diagnose disease, monitor hazardous substances

2013-10-02
WASHINGTON, Oct. 2, 2013—For hundreds of years, optical devices like telescopes and microscopes have relied on solid lenses that slide up and down to magnify and to focus. To tune how much light is received, conventional devices use mechanical contraptions like the blades that form the adjustable aperture in cameras. To meet demands for ever smaller imaging systems, researchers are working to create entirely unconventional ways of focusing light. In pursuit of this vision, engineers from the University of Freiburg in Germany have built a novel type of imaging system inspired ...

How one transportation business survived hurricane sandy

2013-10-02
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- In a year-long case study of a major American transportation company, researchers at The Ohio State University have uncovered the strategies that helped the company maintain safety and meet customer demand during 2012's Hurricane Sandy. One key to the company's effective response was its setup of a weather event management team, an ad hoc group that set planning priorities as the storm approached the United States, ensuring the protection of personnel and equipment in hurricane's path. More surprisingly, as landfall was imminent, the company's schedulers ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Machine learning boosts accuracy of solar power forecasts

Researchers create chemotaxic biomimetic liquid metallic leukocytes with versatile behavior

Beyond DNA: How environments influence biology to make things happen

Alarming gap on girls’ sport contributes to low participation rates

New study adds to evidence of stroke and heart attack risk with some hormonal contraceptives

Can artificial intelligence save the Great Barrier Reef?

Critical thinking training can reduce belief in conspiracy theories

Babies respond positively to smell of foods experienced in the womb

New blood-clotting disorder identified by McMaster University researchers

Vitamin E succinate controls tumor growth and enhances immunotherapy effects

University of Tennessee physicist named Cottrell Scholar

Simple, quick test can predict fall risk in older adults six months in advance

Mass General Brigham researchers awarded ARPA-H funding to enhance health outcomes in rural America

Semaglutide shows promise in reducing cravings for alcohol, heavy drinking

Epidural steroid injections for chronic back pain: An AAN systematic review

More sunshine as a baby linked to less disease activity for children with MS

Study finds more barriers to genetic testing for Black children than white children

Removal of parental consent requirement reduces gestational duration at abortion for minors

Dating is not broken, but the trajectories of relationships have changed

Global study identifies markers for the five clinical stages of Parkinson’s disease

Bacterial cellulose promotes plant tissue regeneration

Biohybrid hand gestures with human muscles

Diabetes can drive the evolution of antibiotic resistance

ChatGPT has the potential to improve psychotherapeutic processes

Prioritise vaccine boosters for vulnerable immunocompromised patients and prevent emergence of new COVID variants, say scientists

California's most economically and culturally important species among those most vulnerable to projected climate change

Scientists develop novel self-healing electronic skin for health monitoring

Models show intensifying wildfires in a warming world due to changes in vegetation and humidity; only a minor role for lightning

Unraveling the complex role of climate in dengue dynamics

INSEAD celebrates five years of impact in North America during its second Americas Conference 2025

[Press-News.org] Babies born at 37 and 38 weeks are at higher risk for adverse health outcomes
These 'early-term' babies are more likely to experience low blood sugar or to require respiratory support and they were at additional risk if born by cesarean section