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e-Article

Relationships between cerebral autoregulation and markers of kidney and liver injury in neonatal encephalopathy and therapeutic hypothermia
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Perinatology; August 2017, Vol. 37 Issue: 8 p938-942, 5p
Subject
Language
ISSN
07438346; 14765543
Abstract
Objective:We studied whether cerebral blood pressure autoregulation and kidney and liver injuries are associated in neonatal encephalopathy (NE).Study design:We monitored autoregulation of 75 newborns who received hypothermia for NE in the neonatal intensive care unit to identify the mean arterial blood pressure with optimized autoregulation (MAPOPT). Autoregulation parameters and creatinine, aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) were analyzed using adjusted regression models.Results:Greater time with blood pressure within MAPOPTduring hypothermia was associated with lower creatinine in girls. Blood pressure below MAPOPTrelated to higher ALT and AST during normothermia in all neonates and boys. The opposite occurred in rewarming when more time with blood pressure above MAPOPTrelated to higher AST.Conclusions:Blood pressures that optimize cerebral autoregulation may support the kidneys. Blood pressures below MAPOPTand liver injury during normothermia are associated. The relationship between MAPOPTand AST during rewarming requires further study.