Abstract

Objective: To determine the incidence and risk factors associated with neonatal hypoglycemia in the premature population <33 weeks' gestation.Methods: This was a secondary retrospective analysis from previous infants enrolled in randomized controlled trials. A total of 255 infants <33 weeks' gestation were born during the study period. Eight infants were excluded due to missing glucose or maternal data and 175 infants were analyzed.Main outcome measures: Primary outcome was hypoglycemia (blood glucose <2.6mmol/L) determined via glucose oxidase method on arterial or venous blood gas. Birth weight subgroups: small for gestational age (SGA, birth weight <10%ile for gestational age) and large for gestational age (LGA, birth weight >90%ile for gestational age). Maternal hypertension was systolic blood pressure >140mmHg.Results: 175 infants <33 weeks' gestational age (89 male, 84 female) were analyzed. Hypoglycemia occurred in 59 infants (33.7%). Maternal hypertension (OR 3.07, 95% CI 1.51–6.30, p = 0.002) was the sole risk factor for neonatal hypoglycemia. Protective factors for hypoglycemia included labor at time of delivery (OR 4.51, 95% CI 2.29–9.18, p <0.0001) and antenatal magnesium sulfate (OR 2.53, 95% CI 1.23–5.50, p = 0.01). There were no significant differences between hypoglycemic and euglycemic infants in sex, gestational age, LGA infants, antenatal steroids, vaginal birth, or maternal diabetes. SGA infants were excluded from analysis due to sample size.Conclusions: Premature infants <33 weeks' gestation have increased risk of hypoglycemia. Maternal hypertension increases hypoglycemia risk. Antenatal magnesium sulfate administration or labor at time of delivery decrease hypoglycemia risk.

Highlights

  • Neonatal hypoglycemia is a common occurrence during the first few days after birth as infants adjust to the extrauterine environment [1, 2]

  • The risk factor associated with hypoglycemia was maternal hypertension (hypertension vs. normal: OR 3.07 (95%CI 1.51– 6.30) p = 0.002), indicating a significantly greater proportion of hypoglycemia infants had hypertensive mothers

  • Protective factors for hypoglycemia, meaning a significantly greater proportion of infants were euglycemic than hypoglycemia, included being in labor at time of delivery (no vs. yes: OR 4.51 p < 0.0001), and administration of magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) prior to delivery (no vs. yes: OR 2.53 (95%CI 1.23–5.50) p = 0.01)

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Summary

Methods

This was a secondary retrospective analysis from previous infants enrolled in randomized controlled trials. A total of 255 infants

Results
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
1.65 Excluded Excluded
CONCLUSION
ETHICS STATEMENT
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