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To:
ADC Fetal and Neonatal Edition Letters and ADC Education and Practice Letters
Electronic Letters to:
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Electronic letters published:
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Louise V A Leven, Specialty Registrar Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Yorkill, Glasgow G3 8SJ, Peter D Macdonald
Send letter to journal:
louiseleven{at}nhs.net Louise V A Leven, et al.
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Iyer et al [1] report the effects of a
neonatal weight monitoring policy on the incidence of hypernatraemic
dehydration. This policy led to an
increased recognition of affected infants, but identified cases at an earlier
and milder degree of dehydration. We
examined the effect of introducing a similar policy on cases of more severe
dehydration. We wished to test whether
the background rate of hypernatraemic dehydration was rising and to test
whether a weight monitoring policy had any effect on the background
incidence. We studied cases of moderate/severe
hypernatraemic dehydration in infants born in a single maternity unit attached
to the sole inpatient paediatric unit for the city. The maternity unit delivers approximately
3,500 births per annum. Infants
requiring readmission in the neonatal period may be admitted to the paediatric
inpatient unit or to the maternity hospital of birth. We reviewed the biochemical records for nine
years (January 1998 - December 2006) from the single laboratory that serves
both the paediatric inpatient unit and the attached maternity unit. We
identified 198 cases of infants under the age of four weeks with a plasma
sodium of >150mmols/l. We were able
to obtain and review 178 (90%) of these case-notes. Many cases of hypernatraemia were due to underlying medical or surgical
problems including prematurity. We identified 67 cases of hypernatraemic
dehydration in otherwise healthy breast-fed neonates during this period. A
weight monitoring policy was introduced at the end of 2003. Babies were weighed
around days 2, 5 and 10 and those with >10% weight loss were seen by
specialist breast-feeding support sisters for supervised feeding, advice on
positioning and milk expression. Initially, we compared the 3-year period from 1998
to 2000 with the 3-year period from 2001 to 2003, using as a denominator the
number of breast-fed infants discharged from the maternity unit during that
period. We compared the number of cases between 1998 and 2003 with those in the
3-year period that followed. The table documents the weight, age and plasma
sodium at presentation. Data is presented as median and range in view of its
skewed distribution. Comparison
of the two 3-year periods prior to policy implementation showed no significant
change over this time (1998-2000: 4.54% and 2001-2003: 4.99%). Comparison of the 6-year period prior to the
introduction of our policy and the 3-year period following, documents a fall in
incidence from 4.77 to 2.94 cases per 1000 breast fed infants p = 0.066, 95% CI
= -3.77 to + 0.12. The pre and post policy incidence using the number of live
births as the denominator is 2.4/1000 and 1.5/1000 respectively. The
incidence of hypernatraemic dehydration in our study is less than that reported
by Iyer of 7.4 cases/1000 live births. This is not
surprising as we report only the more severe cases. In Iyer’s
study the policy of neonatal weight monitoring led to an increased
identification of hypernatraemic infants but reduction in severity of the
identified cases. Our study supports this; we only looked at more severe cases
but observed reduced numbers of such cases to a degree that could potentially
be very important clinically. It
is concerning that we continue to see reports of serious thrombotic
complications of neonatal hypernatraemic dehydration [2,3].
These cases may be preventable if recognised earlier. Clinical assessment is
important and all professionals dealing with breast-feeding mothers and their
infants need to be trained to recognise the clinical cues of an infant who is
not receiving an adequate intake. However weight monitoring can provide a
valuable safety-net to identify such infants earlier, allow targeted additional
breast-feeding support and prevent more severe cases. Data is available to allow
thresholds to be set for intervention and support [4,5].
We
have previously demonstrated that introducing such a weight monitoring policy
does not adversely affect the number of mothers breast-feeding and suggested
that identifying and addressing problems at an earlier stage would encourage
mothers to continue breast-feeding who might otherwise have given up [6]. Iyer’s work supports this,
demonstrating an increase in the rate of breast-feeding at final discharge
amongst their cases of hypernatraemic dehydration. We did not see this in our more severe cohort
but it is likely that our post-policy group represents more refractory cases
that have failed to respond to initial attention to feeding position and
attachment. We
would encourage the widespread adoption of a policy of neonatal weight
monitoring as it is likely to identify cases of hypernatraemic dehydration at
an earlier stage when intervention can support continued breast-feeding and
reduce the incidence of more severe cases.
Table Effect Of
Weight Monitoring Policy On Cases Of Hypernatraemic Dehydration References 1.
Iyer NP, Srinivasan R, Evans K et al. Impact of an early
weighing policy on neonatal hypernatraemic dehydration and breast feeding. Arch
Dis Child 2008; 93: 297-299. 2.
Shroff R, Hignett R, Pierce C, et al. Life-threatening hypernatraemic
dehydration in breastfed babies. Arch Dis Child 2006;
91: 1025-1026. 3. Fawke J, Whitehouse WP, Kudumula V. Monitoring of newborn weight, breast feeding and severe neurological sequelae secondary to dehydration. Arch Dis Child 2008; 93: 264-265. 4.
Macdonald PD,
Ross SRM, Grant L, et al. Neonatal weight loss in breast and formula-fed
infants. Arch Dis Child Fetal
Neonatal Ed 2003; 88: F472-476. 5.
Van Dommelen P, van Wouwe JP, Breuning-Boers JM, et al. Reference chart for relative
weight change to detect hypernatraemic dehydration. Arch Dis
Child 2007; 92: 490-494. 6. McKie A, Young D, Macdonald PD. Does monitoring newborn weight
discourage breastfeeding? Arch Dis Child 2006; 91:
44-46. |
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