If the respiratory distress is mild then the patient should be carefully monitored, ie heart rate, temperature, blood pressure, signs of respiratory distress, fluid balance. Adequate thermoregulation may be obtained in a closed incubator or from an open, radiant heat source incubator.
Interventions that may be required include:-
- ventilation
- fluids: an infant in respiratory distress should not be bottle-fed. In severe respiratory distress fluids are administered intravenously
- acid-base: if there is severe respiratory acidosis (pH less than 7.20 and pCO2 > 60 mmHg) then artificial ventilation may be required. In severe metabolic acidosis sodium bicarbonate infusion may be necessary.
- antibiotics: in infants with respiratory distress where there is a suspicion of infection then antibiotic treatment that combines a penicillin - penicillin G or amoxycillin - and an aminoglycoside, for example gentamicin. Other circumstances when such a regimen may be indicated include the necessity for mechanical ventilation and arterial catheterization.
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
Notes:
- early inhaled nitric oxide therapy in premature newborns with respiratory distress
- low-dose inhaled nitric oxide did not reduce the overall incidence of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, except among infants with a birth weight of at least 1000 g - however there is evidence that it did reduce the overall risk of brain injury (1)
- infants born preterm (before 37 weeks’ gestation) are at high risk of neonatal lung disease and its sequelae
- the more preterm the baby the greater are the risks, especially when birth occurs before 32 weeks (2)
- a single course of prenatal corticosteroids reduces the risk of RDS from 26% to 17% (relative risk (RR) 0.66, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.59 to 0.73) (2)
- there is evidence that, in women at risk of preterm birth (at ongoing risk of preterm birth at < 34 weeks' gestation)
- repeat dose(s) of prenatal corticosteroids reduce the occurrence and severity of neonatal lung disease and the risk of serious health problems in the first few weeks of life
- the review authors conclude that these short-term benefits for babies support the use of repeat dose(s) of prenatal corticosteroids for women at risk of preterm birth. However, these benefits are associated with a reduction in some measures of weight, and head circumference at birth, and there is still insufficient evidence on the longer-term benefits and risks
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