Absence of Kernicterus in Low-Birth-Weight Infants From 1971 Through 1976: Comparison With Findings in 1966 and 1967

Abstract
A review of 34 autopsied infants weighing 2,250 gm or less who died on the third to seventh days of life during the six-year period from 1971 through 1976 failed to reveal any cases of kernicterus. This contrasts with an incidence of 64% in low-birth-weight infants selected in the same manner from the same neonatal intensive care unit-premature center during the period 1966 and 1967. The 34 infants in the 1971-1976 series were not significantly different with regard to their birth weights, Apgar scores, perinatal complications, or pathologic findings, other than their lack of kernicterus, from the 14 infants in the 1966-1967 series. The only significant difference between these two groups of infants was a lower mean peak serum bilirubin concentration in the 1971-1976 series, corresponding with the establishment in 1970 of a more aggressive policy of exchange transfusion and phototherapy. The prevention of excessive hyperbilirubinemia along with the development of more sophisticated intensive care of the neonate in recent years may be responsible for the elimination of kernicterus in the 1971-1976 series of infants.
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