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November 4, 2005|Volume 34, Number 10


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Innovative therapy curbs effects
of loss of oxygen during birth

Infants born with oxygen loss who are given an innovative therapy that lowers their entire body temperature by four degrees within the first six hours of life have a better chance of survival and lower incidence of brain injury, according to a report in the Oct. 13 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.

"We speculate that this therapy lowers the brain temperature as well as body temperature and slows down the injury process caused by birth asphyxia, which results in loss of oxygen to the brain," says Dr. Richard A. Ehrenkranz, professor of pediatric neonatology and obstetrics and gynecology at the School of Medicine and Yale-New Haven Hospital.

"Less injury means a better outcome and fewer cases of cerebral palsy and other complications," he adds.

Ehrenkranz co-authored the study with colleagues at 14 other institutions in the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Neonatal Research Network.

Hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) occurs when an infant's brain fails to receive sufficient oxygen or blood before birth. The condition may occur hours before birth or during labor and delivery. It can be caused by complications such as compression or tearing of the placenta or the umbilical cord, and rupture of the uterus. Many infants who survive HIE experience brain disability.

The team, led by Dr. Seetha Shankaran at Wayne State University, studied the effect of hypothermia or reduced body temperature in full-term infants with asphyxia and related complications at birth.

Researchers randomly assigned 208 infants to either a control group or a whole-body cooling group, where their body temperature was kept at 92.3 degrees for 72 hours, then slowly re-warmed. Body temperatures were lowered by placing babies on a blanket initially filled with circulating 41-degree water. Both groups received standard newborn intensive care including monitoring of vital signs.

When the infants were examined to assess their outcome at 18 to 22 months of age, 44% of those in the group treated with hypothermia developed a moderate to severe disability or had died, as compared to 62% in the control group.

The Neonatal Research Network will also follow both groups of children until they reach age 6 or 7, to compare the incidence of health problems or learning difficulties.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

School of Music receives gift of $100 million

Class of 1954 Chemistry Building officially opened

IOM elects six from Yale

Yale will mark Veterans Day with salute to alumnus, flag rededication

University dedicates new Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity

World Fellow Ibrahim honored for her human rights work in Nigeria

Today's press fails to get 'to the bottom of things,' journalist says

Activist calls for cohesive global response to international migration

Yale's matching gift to United Way supports school readiness

Wife's illness inspires pathologist to investigate Alzheimer's

Yale employee lends skills to help animals after the hurricane

Doctor's career spent researching body's 'master chemical director'

MEDICAL CENTER NEWS

New Yorker humorist to give public reading

Veterans Day concert will feature School of Music alumni

Alumni innovators to discuss 'Entrepreneurship and the Law'

Vignery to conduct pharmaceutical research as Yale-Pfizer Visiting Fellow

Cell biologist Ira Mellman elected to prestigious EMBO

Richard Lalli to perform at benefit gala for the Neighborhood Music School


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