| Literature DB >> 26428285 |
Carlo Dani1, Simone Pratesi2, Francesco Raimondi3, Costantino Romagnoli4.
Abstract
Hyperbilirubinemia is a frequent condition affecting newborns during the first two weeks of life and when it lasts more than 14 days it is defined as prolonged jaundice. This condition requires differential diagnosis between the usually benign unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia and the pathological conjugated hyperbilirubinemia, that is mainly due to neonatal cholestasis. It is important that the diagnosis of neonatal cholestasis be well-timed to optimize its management, prevent worsening of the patient's outcome, and to avoid premature, painful, expensive, and useless tests. Unfortunately, this does not always occur and, therefore, the Task Force on Hyperbilirubinemia of the Italian Society of Neonatology presents these shared Italian guidelines for the management and treatment of neonatal cholestasis whose overall aim is to provide a useful tool for its assessment for neonatologists and family pediatricians.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26428285 PMCID: PMC4591626 DOI: 10.1186/s13052-015-0178-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 2.638
The hierarchy of evidence from the center for evidence-based-medicine
| Level | Definition |
|---|---|
| 1a | Systematic review (with homogeneity) of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) |
| 1b | Individual RCT (with narrow confidence interval) |
| 2a | Systematic review (with homogeneity) of cohort studies |
| 2b | Individual cohort study |
| 3a | Systematic review (with homogeneity) of case–control studies |
| 3b | Individual case–control study |
| 4 | Case-series (and poor quality cohort and case–control studies) |
| 5 | Expert opinion without explicit critical appraisal, or based on physiology, bench research or “first principles” |
Differential diagnosis of neonatal cholestasis
| Infections | Inherited and metabolic disorders |
|---|---|
|
| α1-antitrypsin deficiency |
| Rubella | Galactosemia |
| Reovirus3 | Glycogen storage disorder type IV |
| Adenovirus | Fructosemia |
| Echovirus | Cystic fibrosis |
| Coxsackie virus | Hemochromatosis |
| Human herpes virus 6 | Tyrosinemia |
| Varicella zoster | Arginase deficiency |
| Herpes simplex | Zellweger’s syndrome |
| Parvovirus | Dubin-Johnson syndrome |
| Hepatitis B and C | Rotor syndrome |
| Human immuno-deficiency virus | Hereditary fructosemia |
|
| Niemann Pick disease, type C |
| Urinary tract infection | Gaucher’s disease |
| Syphilis | Wolman’s disease |
| Listeriosis | Bile acid synthetic disorders |
| Tuberculosis | Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis |
|
| North American Indian familial cholestasis |
| Malaria | Aagenaes syndrome |
| X-linked adreno-leukodystrophy | |
| Chromosomal disorders | Vascular disorders |
| Turner’s syndrome | Budd-Chiari syndrome |
| Trisomy 18 | Neonatal asphyxia |
| Trisomy 21 | Multiple haemangiomata |
| Trisomy 13 | Congestive heart failure |
| Cat-eye syndrome | |
| Donahue’s syndrome (Leprechauns) | |
| Bile duct anomalies | Neoplastic disorders |
| Biliary atresia | Neonatal leukemia |
| Choledochal cyst | Histiocytosis X |
| Alagille syndrome | Neuroblastoma |
| Non-syndromic bile duct paucity | Hepatoblastoma |
| Inspissated bile syndrome | Erythrophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis |
| Caroli syndrome | |
| Choledocholithiasis | |
| Gall-stones | |
| Neonatal sclerosing cholangitis | |
| Spontaneous common bile duct perforation | |
| Toxicity | Miscellaneous |
| Parenteral nutrition | Neonatal lupus erythematosus |
| Fetal alcohol syndrome | ’Le foie vide’ (infantile hepatic non-regenerative disorder) |
| Drugs | Indian childhood cirrosi |
| ARC syndrome (Arthrogryposis, renal tubular dysfunction and cholestasis) |
Fat-soluble vitamin supplementation in the cholestatic infant
| Vitamin | Preparation | Dosage | Adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin A | Aquasol A | 5000-25000 U/day per os | Hepatotoxicity, Hypercalcemia, |
| Vitamin D | Cholecalciferol | 800-5000 U/day PO per os | Hypercalcemia, Nephrocalcinosis |
| Vitamin E | D-α-tocopheryl polyethylene glycol 1,000 succinate | 15-25 U/kg/day PO per os | Potentiation of vitamin K deficiency coagulopathy |
| Vitamin K | Phytomenadione | 2.5–5 mg twice a week to every day per os |
Fig. 1Flow chart for the management of the neonatal cholestasis in term and preterm infants. Modified from ’ with permission