KMID : 1039920140210040244
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Neonatal Medicine 2014 Volume.21 No. 4 p.244 ~ p.250
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Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: A Single Center Study
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Oh Moon-Yeon
Lee Byong-Sop Oh Seong-Hee Jang Hee-Jin Do Hyun-Jeong Kim Ellen Ai-Rhan Kim Ki-Soo Lee Joo-Hoon Park Young-Seo Lee Beom-Hee Yoo Han-Wook
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Abstract
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Purpose: Continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) has become an essential modality for the care of critically ill pediatric patients who require renal support. However, experience with CRRT in the neonatal population is not common in Korea. In this study, we aimed to investigate the clinical features, outcomes, and complications of CRRT in neonates in a single neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).
Methods: We reviewed the medical records of 17 neonates who underwent CRRT at a NICU of a tertiary hospital. The data included demographic characteristics, diagnosis, complications, and laboratory and CRRT parameters.
Results: The median age at initiation of CRRT was 6 days after birth. All patients were treated with CRRT in continuous venovenous hemodiafiltration mode, with a median treatment duration of 57 hours. The main indication for CRRT was an inborn error of metabolism (IEM), followed by congenital renal disease and multiorgan failure. In patients with an IEM, the median plasma ammonia level at the CRRT initiation was 1,232 ¥ìmol/L, and the mean duration until the ammonia level decreased to half of the peak ammonia level was 7.3¡¾2.5 hours. The overall hospital mortality rate was 41.2%. The outcomes of the 10 survivors after discharge included death (n=2), loss to followup (n=3), and survival with developmental delay (n=4).
Conclusion: Although CRRT was effective in lowering the plasma ammonia level of neonates with IEM, the associated mortality and morbidity were high. Hence, further studies are needed to optimize the CRRT protocol and to establish an effective patient referral system in Korea.
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KEYWORD
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Continuous renal replacement therapy, Neonatal intensive care unit, Inborn errors of metabolism, Hyperammonemia
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