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Published in: European Journal of Pediatrics 4/2024

Open Access 08-01-2024 | RESEARCH

Electrical Cardiometry during transition and short-term outcome in very preterm infants: a prospective observational study

Authors: C. E. Schwarz, J. M. O’Toole, D. B. Healy, J. Panaviene, V. Livingstone, E. M. Dempsey

Published in: European Journal of Pediatrics | Issue 4/2024

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Abstract

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the association of Electrical Cardiometry (EC)-derived cardiac output indexed to weight (CO) and its changes during the first 48 h in relation to adverse short-term outcome in very preterm infants. In this prospective observational study of preterm infants < 32 weeks gestational age (GA), the combined adverse outcome was defined as mortality or abnormal cranial ultrasound (any grade intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) or periventricular leukomalacia) within the first 2 weeks postnatally. Logistic regression models were used to investigate the association between median CO and outcome and mixed-effects models for the time trajectory of CO. In the absence of device-specific thresholds for low or high CO, no thresholds were used in our analysis. Fifty-three infants (median (IQR) GA 29.0 (25.4–30.6) weeks, birthweight 1020 (745–1505) g) were included in the analysis. Median CO was 241 (197–275) mL/kg/min for the adverse outcome and 198 (175–227) mL/kg/min for normal outcome (odds ratio (OR) (95% confidence interval (95% CI)), 1.01 (1.00 to 1.03); p = 0.028). After adjustment for GA, the difference was not significant (adjusted OR (95% CI), 1.01 (0.99 to 1.02); p = 0.373). CO trajectory did not differ by outcome (p = 0.352). A post hoc analysis revealed an association between CO time trajectory and ICH ≥ grade 2.
          Conclusions: EC-derived CO estimates within 48 h postnatally were not independently associated with brain injury (any grade) or mortality in the first 14 days of life. CO time trajectory was found to be associated with ICH ≥ grade 2.
What is Known:
• Bioreactance-derived cardiac output indexed to bodyweight (CO) in the transitional period has been associated with adverse short-term outcome in preterm infants.
What is New:
• Electrical Cardiometry (EC)-derived CO measurements in very preterm infants during the transitional period are not independently associated with adverse outcome (death or ultrasound detected brain damage) within 2 weeks postnatally.
• In the first 48 h EC-derived CO increases over time and is higher in extremely preterm infants compared to very preterm and differs from previously reported bioreactance-derived CO values.
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Literature
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go back to reference Schwarz CE, Livingstone V, O'Toole JM, Healy DB, Panaviene J, Dempsey EM (2022) Agreement of cardiac output estimates between electrical cardiometry and transthoracic echocardiography in very preterm infants. Neonatology 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1159/000525755 Schwarz CE, Livingstone V, O'Toole JM, Healy DB, Panaviene J, Dempsey EM (2022) Agreement of cardiac output estimates between electrical cardiometry and transthoracic echocardiography in very preterm infants. Neonatology 1–8. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1159/​000525755
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Metadata
Title
Electrical Cardiometry during transition and short-term outcome in very preterm infants: a prospective observational study
Authors
C. E. Schwarz
J. M. O’Toole
D. B. Healy
J. Panaviene
V. Livingstone
E. M. Dempsey
Publication date
08-01-2024
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Pediatrics / Issue 4/2024
Print ISSN: 0340-6199
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1076
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-023-05387-1

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