Association between patent ductus arteriosus flow and home oxygen therapy in extremely preterm infants
Jana Termerova, Ales A. Kubena, Karel Liska, Viktor Tomek, Richard Plavka

TL;DR
The study shows that higher patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) blood flow in extremely preterm infants is linked to needing home oxygen therapy later.
Contribution
This study identifies a novel association between PDA flow patterns and long-term respiratory outcomes in extremely preterm infants.
Findings
PDA flow peaks by the end of the second postnatal week and is associated with future need for home oxygen therapy.
Left ventricular output increases as a marker of preload, while superior vena cava flow remains stable.
The association between PDA flow and respiratory outcomes highlights potential targets for preventing chronic lung disease.
Abstract
Central blood flow measurements include the estimation of right and left ventricular output (RVO, LVO), superior vena cava (SVC) flow, and calculated patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) flow. We aimed to provide an overview of the maturation patterns of these values and the relationship between PDA flow and the need for home oxygen therapy. This prospective single-center study was conducted in infants born at <26 weeks of gestation. We performed echocardiographic measurements five times during their life (from the 4th post-natal day to the 36th postmenstrual week). Sixty patients with a mean birth weight of 680 (590, 760) g were included. Postnatal development of LVO and PDA flow peaked at the end of the second postnatal week (427 and 66 mL/kg/min, respectively). The RVO increased between days 4 and 7–8. The SVCF was most stable. The development curves of PDA flow differed between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCongenital Heart Disease Studies · Cardiovascular Conditions and Treatments · Neonatal Respiratory Health Research
