Urinary malondialdehyde concentration in preterm neonates: is there a relationship to disease entities of neonatal intensive care?
- 1 February 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Paediatrica
- Vol. 82 (2) , 202-205
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1651-2227.1993.tb12639.x
Abstract
In a retrospective study, urinary malondialdehyde concentration in 45 preterm neonates (25–35 weeks' gestation) during their first month of life was measured by HPLC. Urine was collected on different days of life as a 3-h sample. The frequency of urine collection and measurement varied between one (n = 22) and seven times (n = 8) per child. The study group was divided into three categories according to birth weight: low-birth-weight infants (LBW) (n= 16), very low-birth-weight infants (VLBW) (n = 17) and extremely low-birth-weight infants (ELBW) (n=12). Urinary malondialdehyde concentration was highest in the ELBW group: 1.15 (0.66, 2.12) μmol/l (median and quartiles) versus 0.58 (0.34, 1.18) μmol/l in the VLBW and 0.60 (0.40, 1.06) μmol/l in the LBW groups (ELBW versus VLBW, p < 0.005; ELBW versus LBW, pp < 0.005). Likewise, a higher malondialdehyde concentration was found in infants requiring mechanical ventilation (intermittent mandatory IMV or high frequency ventilation) compared to those breathing spontaneously (intermittent mandatory ventilation: 0.80 (0.42, 1.66); p < 0.05 and high frequency ventilation: 1.20 (0.83, 2.13); p < 0.001 versus 0.57 (0.33, 0.88) μmol/l). Malondialdehyde concentrations correlated significantly with FiO2 yalues of the individual patients (r = 0.22; pμmol/l;p 0.05)). Malondialdehyde concentrations were also higher in infants with intracranial bleeding compared to those without (0.83 (0.46, 1.42) versus 0.56 (0.33, 1.10) μmol/l; p<0.02)). No significant differences in urinary malondialdehyde concentration were seen, either in relation to i v feeding with or without lipid emulsion or to medication administered. Native malondialdehyde concentration in seven commercial preparations of lipid emulsion after various periods of storage was fairly constant (12.3 ± 0.4 μmol/l) (mean ± SD).Keywords
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