Abstract

++Electrospray-tandem mass spectrometry represents a powerful method for detection of inborn errors of fatty acid metabolism. In the present study, it was used to examine neonatal carnitine metabolism, which reflects fatty acid metabolism. In 70 healthy neonates, blood samples were taken from the umbilical cord and by heel-stick puncture in full-term neonates on postnatal d 5. Cord blood specimens were also obtained from 15 preterm and 10 small-for-gestational-age infants. Acylcarnitine concentrations were measured in dried blood spots by electrospray tandem mass spectrometry. Compared with cord blood, the levels of nearly all acylcarnitine species were significantly higher on the postnatal d 5, whereas free carnitine remained unchanged. Total acylcarnitine/free carnitine-ratio increased, whereas the free carnitine/total carnitine-ratio (0.54 +/- 0.05; p < 0.01) further decreased. A reduced availability of free carnitine in the early neonatal period may affect fatty acid oxidation and thus be of potential pathophysiological relevance under conditions with higher energy demands, e.g. in sepsis. Cord blood concentrations of free carnitine, total carnitine, and total acylcarnitines were strongly related to birth weight (p < 0.01). Lower umbilical artery pH, i.e. mild hypoxia, caused accumulation of mainly long-chain acylcarnitines. This implicates that long-chain acylcarnitines could serve as a parameter of perinatal asphyxia.

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