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Incidence, Course, and Prediction of Hyperbilirubinemia in Near-Term and Term Newborns

225

Citations

21

References

2004

Year

Abstract

Near-term newborns should not be treated as term newborns in the approach to management of hyperbilirubinemia, because infants of 35 to 37 weeks' gestation had significantly lower birth weights, significantly higher serum total bilirubin levels on days 5 and 7, and were 2.4 times more likely to develop significant hyperbilirubinemia than those of 38 to 42 weeks' gestation in the present study. In near-term newborns of 35 to 37 weeks' (245 to 265 days') gestation, the decision to diagnose and treat significant hyperbilirubinemia should be made on the basis of risk status (percentile distribution of the serum bilirubin values on postnatal age) rather than using birth-weight-based thresholds. A nomogram constructed from daily serum bilirubin values of each population, as we present herein, can be used in assessing the age (hour)-specific jaundice risk (high, intermediate, or low) of each near-term newborn.

References

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