Community Academic Profiles

William Benitz

Publication Details

  • Outcome of neonates with birth weights of less than 801 grams.

    Stevenson DK, Petersen KR, Yates BL, Benitz WE, Gale R. J Perinatol. 1988; 8 (2): 82-7

    The follow-up results of intensive care for 68 infants with birth weights less than 801 g treated at Stanford University Hospital were reviewed. The overall survival rate for these infants was 35%, but was 50% for those infants who had been successfully resuscitated in the delivery room and were admitted to the Intensive Care Nursery. Infants under 601 g in weight or less than 25 weeks gestation were more likely to die in the delivery room, but survival among those admitted to the Intensive Care Nursery did not depend on birth weight or gestational age. One-minute and 5-minute Apgar scores less than 5 and interstitial emphysema were associated with increased risk of neonatal death. Only two of 22 survivors (9%) were severely handicapped and another eight (36%) had remediable disabilities at 2 years of age. No infant developed hydrocephalus and only one infant had spasticity. We suggest that the low incidence of major handicaps among survivors encourages the vigorous resuscitation of infants weighing less than 801 g at birth, yet strategies must be developed that will minimize both prolonged dying and the cost of intensive care for nonviable infants.

    PubMedID: 2461442

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