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Minerva Pediatrica 2010 April;62(2):125-31

Copyright © 2010 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA

language: Italian

Quantitative ultrasound for the assessment of bone in the preterm infant

Bagnoli F., Toti M. S., Conte M. L., Badii S., Mori A., Tomasini B., Zani S.

Unità Operativa Complessa di Terapia Intensiva Neonatale, Dipartimento di Pediatria, Ostetricia e Medicina della Riproduzione Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria di Siena, Siena, Italia


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AIM: Preterm infants are at risk of osteopathy of prematurity (OP). The present study aims to assess quantitative ultrasound as a safe and non-invasive method in evaluating bone mineral status in the critically ill preterm infant.
METHODS: Sixty preterm infants (27 females) have been evaluated in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of the University Hospital of Siena. Gestational age was between 22 and 36 weeks and birth weight ranged between 610 and 3 240 g. A single operator did all the measurements on the second metacarpus by the DBM Sonic BP (IGEA). Ultrasound parameters were bone transmission time (BTT, µs) and speed of sound (SOS, m/s).
RESULTS: BTT positively increased with birth gestational age (r=0.72, P<0.001, F-Ratio=62.4428), birth weight (r=0.7827, P<0.001, F-Ratio=91.7274) and birth length (r=0.7729, P<0.001, F-Ratio=86.0748). SOS was also related with gestational age (r=0.2937, P<0.023, F-Ratio=5.4768), birth weight (r=0.2634, P<0.042, F-Ratio=4.3250) and birth length (r=0.3252, P<0.011, F-Ratio=6.8596). Small infants for gestational age showed BTT values lower then infants with appropriate size for gestational age (P<0.03). There was no difference between male and female infants.
CONCLUSION: Quantitative ultrasound is a non-invasive method, which is easy to perform in a Neonatal Intensive Unit, safe, harmless and gentle. This method detects subtle differences in bone mineral status, according to gestational age, weight and length. Quantitative ultrasound is a useful screening tool for early detection of bone status in newborns and a valid method for the longitudinal assessment of bone in growing children.

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