Relation Between Arterial Blood Pressure and Blood Volume and Effect of Infused Albumin in Sick Preterm Infants
- 1 September 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 60 (3), 282-289
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.60.3.282
Abstract
The relation between directly measured arterial blood pressure and blood volume was studied in 61 sick preterm infants. Mean blood volume (derived from plasma volume [T1824 10-min albumin space] and hematocrit value) of 26 hypotensive infants (89.1 .+-. 17.26 ml/kg) was not significantly different from that of 35 normotensive, but otherwise comparable, infants (91.4 .+-. 14.57 ml/kg). There was no relation between arterial mean blood pressure and blood volume. Twenty-one infants with arterial mean blood pressure less than 30 mm Hg were given 1.0 g/kg of 10% salt-poor albumin. Significant increases in blood pressure occurred but were small in magnitude; more than 1/2 of infants had arterial mean blood pressures persistently less than 30 mm Hg. Arterial/alveolar PO2 [partial pressure of O2] ratio decreased significantly with albumin infusion in 6 infants with hyaline membrane disease not receiving continuous distending-airway pressure, suggesting an association between infused albumin and impaired O2 exchange.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Pulmonary function in the newborn infant: the alveolar-arterial oxygen gradientJournal of Applied Physiology, 1963