Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Conclusion
Growth in weight during hospital stay of young survivors of critical illness is impaired. Worse early growth in weight is associated with lower weight and height but not with neuropsychological outcomes at 4-year follow-up.What is known
• Critically ill neonates and infants show impaired early growth during admission and are at risk for later neuropsychological impairments. • Unraveling the association between early growth and later neuropsychological impairments is crucial since the first year of life is critical for brain development.What is new
• Critically ill neonates and infants had age appropriate weight measures at 4-year follow-up. • Poor growth in weight during hospital stay was not associated with poorer cognitive, emotional, or behavioral functioning four years after critical illness.
SUBMITTER: Dijkhuizen EI
PROVIDER: S-EPMC10912138 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Feb
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Dijkhuizen E I EI Dulfer K K de Munck S S van Haren N E M NEM de Jonge R C J RCJ Vanhorebeek I I Wouters P J PJ Van den Berghe G G Verbruggen S C A T SCAT Joosten K F M KFM
European journal of pediatrics 20231111 2
Neonates and infants surviving critical illness show impaired growth during critical illness and are at risk for later neuropsychological impairments. Early identification of individuals most at risk is needed to provide tailored long-term follow-up and care. The research question is whether early growth during hospitalization is associated with growth and neuropsychological outcomes in neonates and infants after pediatric intensive care unit admission (PICU). This is a secondary analysis of the ...[more]