Trwała hipertonia płucna noworodka (PPHN)
This text appears to be a summary of management strategies for Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of the Newborn (PPHN). Here is a condensed version of the key points:
**Diagnostic Tests**
* Echocardiography: To screen and diagnose PPHN, rule out structural heart lesions
* Doppler and color-flow mapping echocardiography: To assess intracardiac shunts and pulmonary arterial pressures
* Cranial ultrasonography: To evaluate for intraventricular bleeding and peripheral areas of hemorrhage or infarct
* Brain computed tomography scanning or magnetic resonance imaging: To evaluate central nervous system injury
**Procedures**
* Cardiac catheterization: Rarely used to exclude congenital heart disease due to echocardiographic findings being typically diagnostic
**Management Principles**
* Continuous monitoring of oxygenation, blood pressure, and perfusion
* Maintaining normal body temperature
* Correction of electrolytes/glucose abnormalities and metabolic acidosis
* Minimal stimulation/handling of the newborn
* Minimal use of invasive procedures (e.g., suctioning)
**Medical Therapy**
* Inotropic support (e.g., dopamine, dobutamine, milrinone)
* Surfactant administration: For premature and full-term newborns with parenchymal lung disease
* Endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation: To maintain normal functional residual capacity and avoid overexpansion
* High-frequency ventilation: Used in newborns with underlying parenchymal lung disease and low lung volumes
* Correction of hypoglycemia, hypocalcemia, acidosis, and alkalosis
* Induced paralysis (controversial and typically reserved for newborns who cannot be treated with sedatives alone)
* Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO): Used when optimal ventilatory support fails to maintain acceptable oxygenation and perfusion
**Pharmacotherapy**
* Inhaled pulmonary vasodilators (e.g., nitric oxide) and supplemental oxygen
* Systemic vasodilators: Potentially beneficial for chronic PPHN after the newborn period (e.g., prostacyclin, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, endothelin receptor antagonists)
* Prostaglandin E1 if the ductus arteriosus is closed or restrictive in the setting of suprasystemic pulmonary artery pressures and/or right ventricular dysfunction leading to poor systemic perfusion