Impact of ethnicity and extreme prematurity on infant pulmonary function

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Abstract

The impact of birth before 27 completed weeks of gestation on infant pulmonary function (PF) was explored in a multi-ethnic population in comparison to more mature preterm controls (PTC) and healthy fullterm infants. Plethysmographic lung volume (FRCpleth) and forced expired volume (FEV0.5) were obtained at ∼12 months post-term age in 52 extremely preterm (EP) infants (median [range] gestational age [GA]: 26 [23-27] weeks; 40% White mothers; 79% with BPD), 41 PTC (GA:35 [30-36] weeks; 37% White mothers) and 95 fullterm infants (GA:40 [37-42] weeks; 86% White mothers). Using reference equations based on identical equipment and techniques, results were expressed as z-scores to adjust for age, sex and body size. FEV0.5 was significantly lower in EP infants when compared with PTC (mean difference [95% CI]: -1.02[-1.60; -0.44] z-scores, P-

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Hoo, A. F., Gupta, A., Lum, S., Costeloe, K. L., Huertas-Ceballos, A., Marlow, N., & Stocks, J. (2014). Impact of ethnicity and extreme prematurity on infant pulmonary function. Pediatric Pulmonology, 49(7), 679–687. https://doi.org/10.1002/ppul.22882

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