Hypoglycemia in the neonate.
Publication/Presentation Date
4-1-2000
Abstract
After a brief history of the development of neonatal hypoglycemia, this review emphasizes the current approach to the anticipation, diagnosis, and management of the neonate with a low plasma glucose concentration. Current techniques for studying the neurophysiological and endocrine-metabolic effects of significant hypoglycemia provide new approaches for establishing relevant definitions of significant hypoglycemia, its prognosis, and pathogenesis. The inadequacy of glucose oxidase strips for screening, the definition of high-risk infants, new definitions for low plasma glucose concentrations, and their treatment are presented as well as the ability of the neonate to respond to significantly low glucose values. New data concerning the hereditary aspects of hyperinsulinemia (Glaser, this issue), hereditary defects in branched-chain amino acid, 3-methylglutaconic aciduria and mitochondrial betaoxidation, and degradation of fatty acids (Ozand, this issue), the role of glucose transporters (Vannucci and Vannucci, this issue), and the newer computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging techniques (Kinnala, this issue) to study neonatal hypoglycemia are reviewed elsewhere in this issue.
Volume
24
Issue
2
First Page
136
Last Page
149
ISSN
0146-0005
Published In/Presented At
Cornblath, M., & Ichord, R. (2000). Hypoglycemia in the neonate. Seminars in perinatology, 24(2), 136–149. https://doi.org/10.1053/sp.2000.6364
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
10805169
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article