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selvanr4
17th December 2009, 18:49
This week we had 2 babies who have received 1 mg of vit.k in the neonatal period presenting with intracranial bleed.
baby.1; 39 days old, B/o V mother anemic undernourished. Baby on exclusive breastfeeds.Baby had fever due to mastitis(skin laceration due to hook injury). Developed focal fits on LT side . Both PT & aPTT prolonged.platelets normal.CT shows bleed on RT side
needed 2 anticonvulsants to control convulsions.
Had blood transfusion for low Hb{8gms%}.
Now baby is better. Feeding well.
Any clues for the reason for the Intracranial bleed? Eventhough the baby received vit.K?
selvan rathinasamy
Erode, India

Alex
18th December 2009, 10:57
One year ago we treated baby second from twins weighted 420 g. His IVG began in 1.5 month of age, and it was first sign of CMV infection.

drmangalabharathi@gmail.com
18th December 2009, 16:23
How sick was the baby prior to bleed?
Did u evalutae for markers of DIVC?

Any significant family history? One need to rule out inherited abnormalities of coag system esp involving common pathways

Stefan Johansson
18th December 2009, 16:39
Two useful links
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18625545
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11949019

Investigate primary dysfunctions of coagulation (coagulation factors etc) and secondary causes like infections, as suggested by Alex above.

And please do not forget: although intracranial bleedings are usually spontaneous events, some infants have injuries as a result of trauma/abuse. Check for other signs of shaken-baby syndrome (such as retinal bleeds) if localization of cerebral bleeds indicate trauma.

selvanr4
22nd December 2009, 20:01
the baby has responded well. convulsions controlled and discharged

drakjaleel
24th December 2009, 18:48
Are they delivered in an institution like yours
Some time preparations make lot of difference
Some authors suggest you can go upto 5 mg
Did you check D-dimor ? Any long term antibiotics?
Very crucial situations is altered perfusion states we need to monitor BP preferably invasive??