Abstract
ABSTRACT: We prospectively assessed and compared the vitamin A status of two groups of preterm neonates (<1500 g birth weight, <32 wk gestation), one who developed clinical and radiographic evidence of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) (n = 10), and the other (control) who developed no significant lung disease (n = 8). The infants with BPD in this study required prolonged mechanical ventilation and supplemental O2 therapy, and had a higher incidence of cardiorespiratory complications when compared to controls. Their mean plasma vitamin A concentrations were significantly lower than those of controls at four sampling times in the 1st postnatal month. In contrast to the controls, infants with BPD showed a substantial decline in their plasma vitamin A concentrations from the initial values, and a high percentage of individual values of plasma vitamin A concentration in these infants were <10 μg/dl during the 8-wk postnatal period of observation. Delayed establishment of gastrointestinal feeding and a lower vitamin A intake in these infants relative to controls may have accounted for this decline. Our data show that preterm neonates who develop BPD have suboptimal plasma vitamin A concentrations for extended periods of time postnatally. We speculate that the necrotizing bronchiolitis and squamous metaplasia of conducting airways associated with vitamin A deficiency could influence the orderly repair of lung injury in susceptible neonates who are mechanically ventilated and could contribute to the pathophysiology of BPD in these infants. Further studies are needed to determine whether more efficient management of these neonates with regard to their vitamin A nutrition and early achievement of vitamin A sufficiency could result in a decrease in the incidence and severity of BPD.
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Shenai, J., Chytil, F. & Stahlman, M. Vitamin A Status of Neonates with Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia. Pediatr Res 19, 185–188 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-198502000-00007
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-198502000-00007
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