Yahoo Poland Wyszukiwanie w Internecie

Search results

  1. 6 sty 2022 · Mild infant jaundice often disappears on its own within two or three weeks. For moderate or severe jaundice, your baby may need to stay longer in the newborn nursery or be readmitted to the hospital. Treatments to lower the level of bilirubin in your baby's blood may include: Enhanced nutrition.

  2. 6 sty 2022 · Infant jaundice is a common condition, particularly in babies born before 38 weeks' gestation (preterm babies) and some breast-fed babies. Infant jaundice usually occurs because a baby's liver isn't mature enough to get rid of bilirubin in the bloodstream.

  3. 8 sie 2021 · Maternal DM significantly affects the foetal heart and foetal–placental circulation in both structure and function and alters the placental villi vascularization with a wide range of cardiac anomalies ranging from small septal defects to major complex heart diseases.

  4. Key results. Sunlight versus no treatment: babies exposed to sunlight may have a reduced occurrence of jaundice and be jaundiced for fewer days compared to babies who have no preventive treatment for jaundice. There was no reduction in readmission to hospital for jaundice in babies exposed to sunlight compared to babies who were not treated.

  5. 28 sie 2018 · In The Lancet Global Health, Tina M Slusher and colleagues1 show, in a rigorous study with clear results, that filtered-sunlight phototherapy (FSPT) can be as efficacious and safe as conventional intensive electric phototherapy (IEPT) for treatment of moderate-to-severe neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia in a simulated rural Nigerian setting.

  6. 28 lip 2020 · Type 1 diabetes is associated with a two- to five-fold increased risk of major complications including congenital anomaly, stillbirth, and neonatal death; and 50% of infants experience complications such as prematurity, large for gestational age (LGA), and admission to a neonatal intensive care unit. 4-6 Women with type 2 diabetes typically ...

  7. 2 lis 2022 · Most newborn babies turn at least a little bit yellow. Known as jaundice, this condition is a very common and usually normal part of the newborn period. But in some very rare cases it can lead to, or be a sign of, a more serious problem. That's why parents need to know about it.