COVID-19阳性母亲与COVID-19阴性母亲所生先天性胃肠道畸形并在住院期间接受适当肠外营养的儿童术后一年的变化情况比较。

IF 1.4 Q3 PEDIATRICS
Timea Elisabeta Brandibur, Nilima Rajpal Kundnani, Kakarla Ramakrishna, Alexandra Mederle, Aniko Maria Manea, Marioara Boia, Marius Calin Popoiu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:COVID-19 阳性妊娠对新生儿的长期影响尚不清楚。先天性胃肠道畸形(CGIM)通常需要紧急手术干预和抗生素治疗。我们旨在比较 COVID-19 阳性孕妇与非 COVID-19 孕妇所生 CGIM 病例在手术后随访一年时的健康状况。研究方法我们对 2022 年在本院接受先天性胃肠道畸形手术的 41 例患者进行了一项比较性观察研究。他们最初接受抗生素和肠外营养治疗,术后逐渐改为肠内营养。然后,我们分析了他们在门诊随访12个月期间的生长发育相关数据。我们将COVID-19阳性母亲所生的孩子分为第一组(14人),将无COVID-19症状或未确认COVID-19阳性母亲所生的孩子分为第二组(33人)。结果41 名患者接受了为期一年的随访(出生后 11 至 13 个月)。因此,最终第一组包括 12 名儿童,第二组包括 29 名儿童。患者根据解剖位置进行分类。其中,56.09%为早产儿,43.91%为足月新生儿。我们根据两组患儿的生长发育里程碑,采用七项参数对其进行评估:语言能力、认知发展、体重增加、身高、精细动作、粗大动作和社交/情感行为。与第二组儿童相比,第一组儿童的身高和体重明显下降。在第一组中,83.33%的患者使用了抗生素,而在第二组中,只有 10.34%的患者使用了抗生素。第 2 组没有吸收不良综合症病例,但第 1 组有 16.66% 的患者出现了这种情况,患者因十二指肠畸形而接受了手术。没有一名婴儿出现坏死性小肠结肠炎、手术后并发症或败血症。所有患儿在手术前后都接受了抗生素预防感染。没有发现死亡病例。结论在我们为期一年的随访研究中发现,即使通过手术矫正了先天性胃肠道畸形,COVID-19 阳性孕妇所生的孩子仍会出现严重的生长发育迟缓,而且胃肠道健康问题可能会更加常见。由于 COVID-19 阳性孕妇的长期影响尚不明确,因此需要在这一领域开展更大规模的队列研究。抗生素会破坏肠道微生物群,尤其是在胃肠道畸形和手术切除的情况下。生长和发育里程碑不仅会受到 CGIMs 的影响,还会因 COVID-19 感染而进一步延迟。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Comparison of One-Year Post-Operative Evolution of Children Born of COVID-19-Positive Mothers vs. COVID-19-Negative Pregnancies Having Congenital Gastrointestinal Malformation and Having Received Proper Parenteral Nutrition during Their Hospital Stay.

Background: The long-term effects on neonates born of COVID-19-positive pregnancies are still unclear. Congenital gastrointestinal malformations (CGIMs) often require urgent surgical intervention and antibiotic coverage. We aim to compare the health status at one-year post-surgical follow-up of cases of CGIM born of COVID-19-positive pregnancies to those of non-COVID-19 pregnancies. Methods: We conducted a comparative, observational study of 41 patients who underwent surgery at our hospital for congenital gastrointestinal malformations in 2022. They were initially treated with antibiotics and parenteral nutrition, which was later replaced with enteral nutrition gradually after the surgery. We then analyzed the data related to their growth and development during their 12-month follow-up visit at our outpatient clinic. We classified the children born of COVID-19-positive mothers as Group 1 (n = 14) and those born of mothers without COVID-19 symptoms or with unconfirmed status as Group 2 (n = 33). Results: Forty-one patients showed up for a one-year follow-up (between 11 and 13 months of life). Hence, the final Group 1 comprised 12 and Group 2 comprised 29 children. The patients were categorized based on their anatomical location. Of the cohort, 56.09% were preemies, and 43.91% were full-term newborns. We used seven parameters to evaluate both groups based on growth and developmental milestones: verbal skills, cognitive development, weight gain, height achieved, fine motor movements, gross motor movements, and social/emotional behavior. Group 1 children showed a significant decrease in height and weight compared to Group 2 children. In Group 1, 83.33% of patients were prescribed antibiotics, while only 10.34% in Group 2 were in the same situation. There were no cases of malabsorption syndrome in Group 2, but 16.66% of patients in Group 1 had it, with patients being operated on for duodenal malformations. None of the infants had necrotizing enterocolitis, post-surgical complications, or sepsis. All the children received antibiotics to prevent infection before and after surgery. No mortality was noted. Conclusions: In our one-year follow-up study, it was seen that even after surgical correction of congenital gastrointestinal malformations, children born of COVID-19-positive pregnancies can suffer serious growth and developmental delays, and gastrointestinal health issues might be more common. Since the long-term effects of COVID-19-positive pregnancies are not yet clear, larger cohort-based studies are required in this domain. Antibiotics destroy gut microbiota, especially in cases of gastrointestinal malformations and surgical resections. Growth and developmental milestones can not only be affected by CGIMs but also be further delayed by COVID-19 infections.

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Pediatric Reports
Pediatric Reports PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
2.10
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0.00%
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55
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11 weeks
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