Neonatal Care Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 main physiologic reasons for neonatal death?

A

Hypothermia
Hypoxia
Hypoglycemia
Hypovolemia

10 to 20% of deaths occur in first week of life

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2
Q

What is considered neonate?

A

Birth to 2 weeks

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3
Q

What is considered pediatric/infant?

A

2 weeks to 8 weeks

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4
Q

At birth puppies and kittens are:

A

Blind
Poikilothermic
Have limited mobility
Entirely dependent on mother for survival

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5
Q

Cardiovascular

Physiology and Anatomy

A

Umbilical circulation is occluded
Closure of ductus venosus
Closure of ductus arteriosus
Circulation redirected to lungs and liver due to changes in pressure
Increased circulation to kidneys, GI tract, muscles

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6
Q

Week 1 vs Week 4: Heart Rate and Blood Pressure

A
Week 1:
High HR (200+) low BP (50)

Week 4: Normalize HR (110) and BP (140)

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7
Q

Cardiovascular System

Anoxia

A

Before 4 days of age can cause profound bradycardia and marked hypotension

Immature parsympathetic system => will NOT respond to atropine administration

Therefore treat with oxygen and warming

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8
Q

First Breaths
Stimulation
Importance

A

Respiration stimulated by hypoxia, hypercapnia, and cooling of the skin

Breathing MUST occur within 8 to 10 minutes otherwise permanent brain damage and death can result

First breath is difficult to do but essential

Genital and umbilical stimulation induces respiration reflex

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9
Q

First Breaths

Physiology

A

Viscid fluid in alveoli requires inspired pressure at -30 (puppy is at -60); must take a large inhale

Expiration of first breath requires postive pressure of 40 to empty alveoli (must exhale hard the first time)

Normal breathing should be reached 40 minutes

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10
Q

First Breaths

Innervention

A

Can clear airways with suction

Could intubate and give a tiny puff of air; do not over inflate lungs, very fragile

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11
Q

Puppies and Fluid Composition

A

Newborns are 80% fluid

Skin is permeable and weight loss will occur in the first 24 hours

Must monitor for dehydration; if peeing should be okay

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12
Q

Renal Development

A

Nephron development continues until 3 weeks of age

Functionally immature for first 8 weeks of life; low GFR, salt loss, low concentration ability

Low BUN/Creatinine
Elevated Phosphorous

Renal blood flow correlated to BP; RAAS not active until 6 weeks of age

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13
Q

Gastrointestinal Development

A

GI sterile at birth

Neutral pH and increased permeability up to 10 hours after birth

Stomach and intestinal contraction stops if body temperature is less than 94; can aspirate and die (keep temp >97)

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14
Q

Neonatal TPR

A

T: 97
HR: 200 bpm
R: 15 to 35 bpm

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15
Q

What can cause bradycardia in a neonate?

A

Hypothermia

Hypoxia

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16
Q

Body Weight

A

Good thing to monitor to assess how they are progressing
Failure to thrive?

Remember weight is lost in the first 24 hours
Day 2: gain 5-7% each day

Puppy: double weight by 7-10 days
Kitten: double weight bey 14 days

17
Q

Factors Affecting Neonatal Survival

A
Unhealthy mother
Stressful delivery
Drugs used during delivery
Congenital abnormality
Environment (temperature, ventilation, sanitation, housing)
Poor nutrition
Infectious disease
Travel and exposure to other animals 
Condition of littermates
18
Q

Mortality and time in labor:

Stage II

A

Less than 5 hours; 6% mortality
5 to 24 hours: 13.7%
More than 24 hours: >90%

19
Q

Maternal Causes of Neonatal Death

A
Maternal neglect 
Immaturity/anxiety/cannibalism
Mastitis
Metritis
Sub involution of placental sites
20
Q

Hypothermia

A

Rewarm over 1-3 hours!

Place in incubator (warmth, oxygen, and humidity control)
Recirculating water heating pads (be careful for thermal burns)

Do NOT use electric eating pads, hot water bottles, or rice bags directly on puppies

Goal: get to 98 but not above

21
Q

Dehydration (hypovolemia)

Physiology

A

Do NOT give oral fluids if temperature is less than 94; will kill puppy

Gastric and intestinal motility diminished which causes aspiration pneumonia

22
Q

Dehydration (hypovolemia)

Treatment

A

Administer 1 mL LRS + 2.5 mL 10% dextrose per 30 grams body weight IV or intraosseous (proximal tibia, greater trochanter, proximal humerus)

Repeat once every 15 minutes until rehydrated (urine production)

23
Q

Hypoglycemia

Treatment

A

Administer 0.25 mL 10% dextrose per 30 grams body weight by stomach tube; body temperature must be above 94

Warmed orphan formula may be administered as supplement (must be warm)

24
Q

Hypoxia

Causes

A

Sepsis
Pneumonia
Hypothermia

25
Q

Hypoxia

Treatment

A

Flow-by 30-40%

Do not give for too long or can cause vitreous fibroplasia

26
Q

Drug Therapy

Anemia

A

Blood transfusion

27
Q

Drug Therapy

FPT

A

Serum

28
Q

Drug Therapy

Antibiotics

A

Ampicillin-clavulanate
Cephalosporins
Amikacin (watch hydration status; renal caution)

29
Q

Drug Therapy

Fading Neonate

A

L-thyroxine if no apparent underlying cause

30
Q

Three main components of milk

A

Protein
Fat
Lactose

31
Q

Hand Raising Puppies
How much
How often

A

105-120 kcal/pound body weight daily

Feed every 2-4 hours for the first 3 days then every 4-6 hours

Do NOT wake neonates if they appear full

32
Q

Hand Raising Kittens
How much
How often

A

100-175 kcal/pound body weight daily

Feed every 2-4 hours for the first 3 days then every 4-6 hours

Do NOT wake neonates if they appear full

33
Q

What laboratory value is always increased in neonates? Why?

A

GGT

Colostrum