Heart failure with brain damage in the newborn.
Open Access
- 31 December 1966
- Vol. 29 (1), 30-33
- https://doi.org/10.1136/hrt.29.1.30
Abstract
The case histories of 3 babies are presented to illustrate the failure of an anatomically normal heart in the presence of cerebral damage. The possible mechanisms are discussed. It is easy to make a mistaken diagnosis of congenital heart disease in this situation.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHIC CHANGES SIMULATING MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION IN CEREBROVASCULAR ACCIDENTThe Lancet, 1964
- ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHIC ABNORMALITIES ASSOCIATED WITH SUBARACHNOID HÆMORRHAGEThe Lancet, 1964
- ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHIC CHANGES ASSOCIATED WITH A CEREBROVASCULAR ACCIDENTThe Lancet, 1964
- FAILURE OF THE HEART AFTER UNDUE ASPHYXIA AT BIRTHPediatrics, 1961
- GLYCOGEN RFSERVES AND THEIR CHANGES AT BIRTH AND IN ANOXIABritish Medical Bulletin, 1961
- THE ABILITY OF YOUNG MAMMALS TO WITHSTAND TOTAL OXYGEN LACKBritish Medical Bulletin, 1961
- Some observations on foetal and new-born rhesus monkeysThe Journal of Physiology, 1960
- The importance of cardiac glycogen for the maintenance of life in foetal lambs and new‐born animals during anoxiaThe Journal of Physiology, 1959
- PULMONARY EDEMA IN PATIENTS DYING WITH DISEASE OF THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEMJAMA, 1952
- Experimental pulmonary cedema of nervous originThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1949