Authors
Janet L Peacock, Louise Marston, Neil Marlow, Sandra A Calvert, Anne Greenough
Publication date
2012/3
Journal
Pediatric research
Volume
71
Issue
3
Pages
305-310
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Results:
Male sex was significantly associated with higher birth weight, death or oxygen dependency (72% vs. 61%, boys vs. girls), hospital stay (97 vs. 86 days), pulmonary hemorrhage (15% vs. 10%), postnatal steroids (37% vs. 21%), and major cranial ultrasound abnormality (20% vs. 12%). Differences remained significant after adjusting for birth weight and gestation. At follow-up, disability, cognitive delay, and use of inhalers remained significant after further adjustment.
Discussion:
We conclude that in very preterm infants, male sex is an important risk factor for poor neonatal outcome and poor neurological and respiratory outcome at follow-up. The increased risks at follow-up are not explained by neonatal factors and lend support to the concept of male vulnerability following preterm birth.
Methods:
Data came from the United Kingdom Oscillation Study, with 797 infants (428 boys) born at 23–28 wk gestational age …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JL Peacock, L Marston, N Marlow, SA Calvert… - Pediatric research, 2012