| Literature DB >> 29233182 |
Raffaele Piumelli1, Riccardo Davanzo2, Niccolò Nassi3, Silvia Salvatore4, Cinzia Arzilli5, Marta Peruzzi3, Massimo Agosti6, Antonella Palmieri7, Maria Giovanna Paglietti8, Luana Nosetti4, Raffaele Pomo9, Francesco De Luca10, Alessandro Rimini11, Salvatore De Masi12, Simona Costabel13, Valeria Cavarretta9, Anna Cremante14, Fabio Cardinale15, Renato Cutrera8.
Abstract
Five years after the first edition, we have revised and updated the guidelines, re-examining the queries and relative recommendations, expanding the issues addressed with the introduction of a new entity, recently proposed by the American Academy of Pediatrics: BRUE, an acronym for Brief Resolved Unexplained Events. In this manuscript we will use the term BRUE only to refer to mild, idiopathic cases rather than simply replace the acronym ALTE per se.In our guidelines the acronym ALTE is used for severe cases that are unexplainable after the first and second level examinations.Although the term ALTE can be used to describe the common symptoms at the onset, whenever the aetiology is ascertained, the final diagnosis may be better specified as seizures, gastroesophageal reflux, infection, arrhythmia, etc. Lastly, we have addressed the emerging problem of the so-called Sudden Unexpected Postnatal Collapse (SUPC), that might be considered as a severe ALTE occurring in the first week of life.Entities:
Keywords: Apparent life-threatening events; Brief resolved unexplained events; Sudden unexpected early neonatal death; Sudden unexpected postnatal collapse
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29233182 PMCID: PMC5728046 DOI: 10.1186/s13052-017-0429-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 2.638
Definition of the levels of evidence and the grade of recommendations [1]
| EVIDENCE LEVEL | |
| I = Evidence obtained from several controlled, randomised clinical trials and/or systematic revisions of randomised trials | |
| II = Evidence obtained from a single randomised trial with an appropriate design | |
| III = Evidence obtained from cohort studies with controls or their meta-analysis | |
| IV = Evidence obtained from case-control retrospective studies or meta-analysis | |
| V = Evidence obtained from case studies (series of cases) without a control group | |
| VI = Evidence based on the opinion of qualified experts or a committee of experts as indicated in the guidelines, in consensus conferences, or based on the opinions of the members of the work group responsible for these guidelines | |
| GRADES OF RECOMMENDATION | |
| A = the performance of that particular procedure or diagnostic test is highly recommended (indicated by a special recommendation supported by good quality scientific evidence, even though not necessarily of Types I or II) | |
| B = there are some doubts about the fact that this particular procedure/operation must always be recommended, however it is considered that its performance must be physical examined | |
| C = there is substantial uncertainty in favour of or against the recommendation to perform this procedure or operation | |
| D = the performance of this procedure is not recommended | |
| E = the performance of this procedure is strongly advised against |
Recommended diagnostic procedures for GER/GERD focusing only on infants with apnoea or ALTE [37]
| Diagnostic investigation | When to perform it |
|---|---|
| pH-monitoring, or better, pH- impedance if available | - suspected recurrent aspiration pneumonia |
| Upper endoscopy | - reported haematemesis not caused by ingested blood |
Useful anamnestic data in the assessment of a potential ALTE [12, 16, 44, 84]
| Family history | |
| History of SUDI or SIDS | |
| Cases of ALTE/BRUE in family members | |
| Heart diseases (arrhythmias, long-QT syndrome, syncope) | |
| Hereditary/genetic/metabolic diseases | |
| Allergic diseases | |
| Epilepsy, breath-holding spells, delayed growth | |
| Malformations (craniofacial, musculoskeletal) | |
| Past medical history | |
| Pre-perinatal history | |
| Prematurity | |
| Birth | |
| Neonatal weight | |
| APGAR score | |
| Normal neonatal screenings | |
| Breastfeeding | |
| Complementary feeding | |
| Height-weight increase | |
| Adequate psycho-motor development | |
| Heart diseases | |
| Neurological diseases | |
| Previous episodes of ALTE/BRUE | |
| Feeding problems (GER) | |
| Sleep and respiratory disorders during sleep (snoring, apnoea) | |
| Respiratory disorders while awake (noisy breathing) | |
| Trauma, emergencies | |
| Previous hospitalisation, surgery | |
| Immunizations | |
| Drug assumption | |
| Other | |
| Recent history | |
| Infant’s general condition over the last 48 h (respiratory tract infections, immunizations, fever, other) | |
| Injuries, falls, recent unexplainable bruising | |
| Drug assumption | |
| Introduction of new foods | |
| Change of feeding schedule | |
| Sleep deprivation | |
| Alteration of normal sleeping-wake pattern and/or lethargy | |
| History of the event | |
| General description | |
| The person reporting the event | |
| Witness of the event (parents, other children, other adults) | |
| Reliability of the narrator | |
| Circumstances of the event | |
| Where it happened (at home or elsewhere; in bed, in cot, on sofa, on floor, etc.) | |
| Position: supine, prone, erect, sitting, in movement | |
| During sleep: indicate whether infant emitted sounds immediately beforehand, had noisy breathing, coughed, vomited, etc. | |
| While awake: indicate whether immediately beforehand the child coughed, vomited, cried in an unusual manner, went stiff, or breathed in food | |
| While feeding | |
| During bath time | |
| Time elapsed since last feed | |
| Environmental risk factors: cigarette smoking, carbon monoxide, ambient temperature, clothes, objects too close to the infant, noises, accidental causes | |
| Psychological factors | |
| Infant’s appearance during the event | |
| Skin colour: pale, cyanotic, erythrosic, ashen, marbled | |
| Colour of the lips: normal, pale, cyanotic | |
| Muscle tone: normal, hypotonia, hypertonia | |
| State of consciousness | |
| Jerking of the limbs | |
| Body temperature: hypo-hyperthermia | |
| Profuse or absent sweating | |
| Respiratory distress | |
| Apnoea | |
| Bleeding | |
| End of the event and actions taken | |
| Time elapsing between the onset of symptoms and first intervention | |
| Time elapsing between intervention and resumption of breathing and regaining of normal appearance and behaviour | |
| Did the episode clear up spontaneously or after stimulation? | |
| Did the episode clear up after vigorous and prolonged stimulation or resuscitation manoeuvres? | |
| Did the episode end abruptly or gradually? | |
| Were the resuscitation manoeuvres carried out by parents or by others? | |
| Before returning to normal was the child calm, confused, agitated, irritable, crying? | |
| Was the emergency service called? | |
| Socio-Environmental History | |
| Family structure, independent home (one or more families) | |
| Home in good condition (no mould, etc.) | |
| Recent changes, stressful conditions or internal conflict | |
| Exposure to toxic substances and drugs | |
| Need to access social services | |
| Level of family anxiety | |
| Contact of the infant with adults with a history of mental illness or substance abuse | |
| Indexes of suspected or possible abuse | |
| Previous assistance by the social services of the juvenile court (domestic violence, abuse) | |
| Repeated changes in the version recounted of the circumstances of the event | |
| History of unexplainable bruises | |
| History incompatible with the infant’s psychomotor development | |
| Incongruence between the observations of the person taking care of the infant and the latter’s psychomotor development, with the infant blamed for bad behaviour |
Objective examination for the assessment of a potential ALTE [43, 46, 47]
| • Weight, length, head circumference | |
| • Skin colour, skin perfusion (capillary refilling time) | |
| • State of hydration | |
| • Peripheral pulses, rhythm, rate, heart auscultation | |
| • Anterior fontanel tension, shape of head, bruises or other lesions | |
| • Limbs: muscle tone, lesions, deformities with possible fractures | |
| • Neurobehavioural assessment, muscle tone, reflexes |
Fig. 1ALTE and BRUE definitions and ALTE first-level examinations
Fig. 2ALTE second-level examinations
CheckCe, particularly during the skin to skin contact [148]
Position: Prone position of the newborn during skin-to-skin contact (SSC) should not obstruct the airways or prevent adequate breathing. The healthcare professional should intervene to correct at risk positions
Colour: Areas to be examined are lips and tongue. Assess the presence of abnormal skin colour: cyanotic or pale
Breath: Breathing pattern, respiratory rate, and amplitude of breaths are physiologically irregular in the newborn. The presence of the following abnormal conditions must be assessed: (a) mouth or nose obstruction; (b) respiratory rate > 60 breaths/min or <30 breaths/min; (c) apnoea or dyspnoea (flaring of the nostrils, grunting, or intercostal retractions)
Pulse oximetry: This should be measured only if the infant shows some abnormal signs during surveillance, appears “unconvincing” to the observer, or if judged appropriate in the local settings due to staff shortage. For term newborns, a value higher than 90% (10° percentile) is considered normal after the first 10 min of life
Skin temperature: Normal skin temperature is 36.5 °C-37.5 °C
Mother and infant should never be left alone: mother-infant SSC should be supervised periodically (at 30, 60, 90, and 120 min of life) by midwives. Presence of the father or another person should be guaranteed. The room should be adequately lit, so that the baby’s skin colour can be seen. Should the mother appear fatigued or drowsy, consider placing the infant in his or her own crib or have the father hold him or her. Emergency call procedures should be clearly explained to parents. If no surveillance can be provided and the parents’ reliability cannot be assessed, the safest option is to admit the newborn infant to the regular nursery. It is recommended to turn off mobile phones to avoid a well-known and relevant source of distraction
Possible investigations following a case of SUPC [135]
| 1. | Placenta pathology and microbiology | ||
| 2. | Maternal blood: Kleihauer (in case of anaemia), viral titres (if not previously performed) | ||
| 3. | Maternal vaginal swabs (if not previously performed) | ||
| 4. | Neonatal blood: | ||
| 4.1 | Full blood count, coagulation, blood gas, renal and liver biochemistry, glucose, lactate, calcium, magnesium, ammonia, beta-hydroxybutyrate, amino acids, free fatty acids, acylcarnitine profile, urate, uric acid, culture, viral titres, blood spot for cardiolipin analysis | ||
| 4.2 | Genetic testing: | ||
| 4.2.1 | In case of suspicion of unrecognised hypoventilation /apnoea, a sample of DNA should be taken specifically to search for abnormalities of the PHOX2B gene | ||
| 4.2.2 | Testing for mutations and copy number variation in MECP2 should be considered as it may be revealed as newborn encephalopathy and/or apnoeas and respiratory collapse | ||
| 4.2.3 | Array-based comparative genomic hybridisation is a useful investigation that will replace conventional karyotyping in the near future as a method for detecting causative chromosomal deletions and duplications | ||
| 5. | Cerebrospinal fluid: biochemistry, culture, virology, lactate, amino acids including glycine | ||
| 6. | Urine: virology, toxicology, organic acids including orotic acid, amino acids including urinary sulphocysteine and urine to be retained for storage | ||
| 7. | Imaging: cranial ultrasound scan, MRI, renal/adrenal ultrasound scan, echocardiogram | ||
| 8. | ECG | ||
| 9. | Ophthalmoscopy | ||
| 10. | Skin biopsy for fibroblast culture | ||
| 11. | Muscle biopsy if unable to exclude neuromuscular or mitochondrial disorder | ||
| 12. | EEG | ||