therapyTimes.com is a daily source for Music, Nursing, Nutrition, Occupational, Pediatric, Physical, Respiratory and Speech Therapy Professionals containing editorials, articles and radiology jobs.

Music Therapy, Nursing, Nutrition Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Pediatric Therapy, Physical Therapy, Respiratory Therapy, Speech Therapy




search site:    
 


home | login | register





:: Travelers Clear the Air on Smoking Regulations

:: Risk Management

:: Turning off the Cystic Fibrosis Switch

:: Low-birth-weight Children Should Have Their Blood Pressure Checked

:: Positive Effects of Poisonous Gas

:: A Breathtaking Gender Divide

:: Study Shows Exposure to Bad Air Raises Blood Pressure

:: Delivering Preterm Pulmonary Findings

:: BAC to the Future

:: Milk Does the Respiratory System Good

:: New Device Helps Premature Babies Suck Better, Faster

:: Steroid Treatment May Offer No Benefit in Preemies

:: Breath Test Sniffs out Cystic Fibrosis

:: COPD Patients Feel the Burn

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Men with severe sleep breathing disorder have higher risk of heart problems

:: Bridging the Breathtaking Divide

:: Gauging Hormones

:: CMS Issues Memo on Oxygen Storage

:: Caffeine to Regulate Breathing of Preterm Babies

:: Childhood Sleep Apnea Linked to Brain Damage, Lower IQ

:: Transplants Trending Upward

:: CPAP May Help Preemies Breathe Easier

:: When Breathing Needs a Tune-Up

:: Asthma patients' immune systems respond differently with allergies

:: Clearing the Air about Women Smokers and Lung Cancer

:: Bronchoscopic Combo Effective Lung Lesion Diagnosis

:: New Method For Neonatal ICUs Reduces Infection And Lung Distress In Premature Infants

:: Considerations for Better Breathing

:: Helium Helps Lung Patients Breathe Easier

:: A Lung Lethal Combination

:: Breathing the Right Number of Sighs of Relief

:: The Big Question

:: Thanks Trekking

:: What Influences Low-Birth-Weight Infants’ Likelihood of Survival

Emergency Medical Record



::  PHYSICAL THERAPIST AND PHYSICAL THERAPY ASSISTANT | US - NM
::  Physical Therapist and PTAs | US - AL
::  Physical Therapists - $7,500 Sign On Bonus | US - SC
::  Physical Therapist & Physical Therapy Assistant | US - KY
::  Physical Therapists for Travel Assignments | US - PA
::  Physical Therapists/Hand Therapist | US - DE
::  Occupational Therapists/Hand Therapist | US - DE
::  Audiology Manager | US - DE, PA
::  Speech Language Pathologist - Outpatient | US - DE
::  Physical Therapists, Outpatient Pediatrics, Full-Time | US - DC
::  Physical Therapy Jobs
By Onward Healthcare
  [more]

   
home :: departments :: journal watch

Breathless Babies: Preemies’ Lung Function Shows Prolonged Impairment
01.25.08

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/012208Pediatrics


Many premature babies face serious health challenges, not the least of which is breathing. But now research suggests that even relatively healthy preemies confront deficits in lung function that last into their second year, if not longer.

“We have shown that healthy preterm infants have reduced lung function in the first months of life that persists into the second year of life,” says principle investigator of the research, Marcus Herbert Jones, MD, PhD, professor in the department of pediatrics at Pontificia Universidade Catolica do Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil. “Healthy infants born prematurely may have smaller sized airways relative to the lung volume,” he explains.

The research was published in a recent issue of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

That premature infants have less well-developed lungs than their full-term counterparts is already established, but researchers were unsure if preemies underwent a “catch-up” period of lung function development.

To determine if that was the case, Jones and colleagues recruited 26 preterm infants born between 30 and 34 weeks’ gestation and compared their lung development and function to that of full-term infants at about 10 weeks of age, then again at an average age of 15 months.

They found that lung capacity and development relative to body size was similar between the groups, but airway function was consistently lower in the premature infants at both evaluations.

“We were unable to detect a catch-up period during the study. There was no change in the rate of increase of lung function when compared to full-term infants,” says Jones.

Remarkably, the researchers also found that premature infants who had more fully developed lungs actually faced greater respiratory problems than those who required prolonged supplemental oxygen.

“It is a counterintuitive finding,” says Jones. “My interpretation is that in preterm infants, supplemental oxygen may be a marker of a less mature lung, which may have a better long-term respiratory prognosis than infants with accelerated maturation due to prenatal events, such as infection and inflammation.”

Maternal tobacco smoking was also associated with lower lung function in both premature and full-term infants in both evaluations, suggesting a long-lasting effect of smoke exposure on infant lung growth and development. The finding supports a number of other studies that have similarly found that maternal smoking adversely affects lung function in both full-term and preterm infants.

While Jones and colleagues postulate that the preterm infants’ reduced lung function may be due to airways that do not develop at the same rate as their lung volume, they also highlight other possible explanations, including more compliant airways, increased bronchial tone or decreased pulmonary elastic recoil, and advocate further research to determine why preterm infants face persistent deficits in lung function.

“These subjects have decreased airway function not only in the first few months of life, but also at the one year follow-up evaluation,” writes Jones. “The persistence of reduced expiratory flows in healthy preterm infants may contribute to their increased risk of respiratory illnesses early in life.”


Source: American Thoracic Society


  Have a comment on this article? Send it



CareFusion at AARC 2009
CareFusion staff discuss the company's offerings for 2010, including ventilated products, non-invasive ventilation and high-flow oxygen solutions to help avoid intubating the patients, alternative airway access devices and closed suction catheters to avoid breaking the circuit which decreases the potential risk of ventilator-associated pneumonia.
[webcast archive]

 
Copyright © 2010, Valley Forge Publishing Group
2570 Boulevard of the Generals, Ste 220, Norristown, PA 19403
p. 800-983-7737 | f. 610-854-3780 | e. info@therapytimes.com
 
Web Award   APEX Award   ASBPE Award   ASHPE Award