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Birth Injuries

10/12/2009
Franklin Gray & White
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Research Aims to Improve Lives of Babies Born With Hypoxic-ischemic Encephalopathy (HIE)

From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

"New research shows that lowering the body temperature of oxygen-deprived newborns reduces the risk for neurological problems later.

Unfortunately, the strategy did not reduce the risk of death or severe disability.

Still, the findings, appearing in the Oct. 1 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, help fill a crucial gap in the effort to treat babies who have brain damage due to hypoxia, or lack of oxygen.

"This is another bit of incremental evidence that hypothermia helps with hypoxia and ischemia [restriction in blood supply]," said Dr. John Ragheb, a professor of clinical neurological surgery and pediatrics at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, who is familiar with the study. "This is going to be a very important paper."

But many institutions already practice cooling in this context, added Dr. James Greenberg, director of the division of neonatology at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Research Foundation, making it uncertain how much the paper is actually going to change current practice.

And there's more that needs to be known, including which newborns would benefit most from the practice, and how best to apply it, he said.

Cooling body temperature, or hypothermia, has been used since the 1920s or 1930s to help with injuries and even to reduce damage after a heart attack, Ragheb noted.

But scientists are only now collecting data on how hypothermia might benefit babies born with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE), when severe blood deprivation to the brain results in the death of brain cells, possibly leading to cerebral palsy or mental retardation.

Previous research has focused on premature babies, Ragheb said. "This is term babies, so it expands the indication for using it."

This study, conducted in five countries, involved 325 babies who were less than six hours old who had been born near-term and who had suffered brain damage as a result of oxygen deprivation."

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Hypoxic-ischemic Encephalopathy (HIE) is a serious condition that may occur as the result of medical malpractice.  The law firm of Franklin Gray & White repesents victims of medical malpractice, including birth-related injuries.  If your family has been the victim of a birth-related injury, such as Hypoxic-ischemic Encephalopathy, please contact, or email, the experienced attorneys of Franklin Gray & White for your free consultation.

 

Franklin Gray & White

The Speed Mansion

505 West Ormsby Avenue

Louisville, Kentucky 40203

Tel: (502) 637-6000

Toll-Free: (800) 637-6033

Fax: (502) 637-1413

email: mwhite@franklingrayandwhite.com




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