Introduction: Neonatal hypoglycemia is common and a preventable cause of brain damage. The goal of management is to prevent or minimize brain injury. The purpose of this mini review is to summarize recent advances and current thinking around clinical aspects of transient neonatal hypoglycemia. Results: The groups of babies at highest risk of hypoglycemia are well defined. However, the optimal frequency and duration of screening for hypoglycemia, as well as the threshold at which treatment would prevent brain injury, remains uncertain. Continuous interstitial glucose monitoring in a research setting provides useful information about glycemic control, including the duration, frequency, and severity of hypoglycemia. However, it remains unknown whether continuous monitoring is associated with clinical benefits or harms. Oral dextrose gel is increasingly being recommended as a first-line treatment for neonatal hypoglycemia. There is some evidence that even transient and clinically undetected episodes of neonatal hypoglycemia are associated with adverse sequelae, suggesting that prophylaxis should also be considered. Mild transient hypoglycemia is not associated with neurodevelopmental impairment at preschool ages, but is associated with low visual motor and executive function, and with neurodevelopmental impairment and poor literacy and mathematics achievement in later childhood. Conclusion: Our current management of neonatal hypoglycemia lacks a reliable evidence base. Randomized trials are required to assess the effects of different prophylactic and treatment strategies, but need to be adequately powered to assess outcomes at least to school age.
Introduction: Neonatal hypoglycemia is common and a preventable cause of brain damage. The goal of management is to prevent or minimize brain injury. The purpose of this mini review is to summarize recent advances and current thinking around clinical aspects of transient neonatal hypoglycemia. Results: The groups of babies at highest risk of hypoglycemia are well defined. However, the optimal frequency and duration of screening for hypoglycemia, as well as the threshold at which treatment would prevent brain injury, remains uncertain. Continuous interstitial glucose monitoring in a research setting provides useful information about glycemic control, including the duration, frequency, and severity of hypoglycemia. However, it remains unknown whether continuous monitoring is associated with clinical benefits or harms. Oral dextrose gel is increasingly being recommended as a first-line treatment for neonatal hypoglycemia. There is some evidence that even transient and clinically undetected episodes of neonatal hypoglycemia are associated with adverse sequelae, suggesting that prophylaxis should also be considered. Mild transient hypoglycemia is not associated with neurodevelopmental impairment at preschool ages, but is associated with low visual motor and executive function, and with neurodevelopmental impairment and poor literacy and mathematics achievement in later childhood. Conclusion: Our current management of neonatal hypoglycemia lacks a reliable evidence base. Randomized trials are required to assess the effects of different prophylactic and treatment strategies, but need to be adequately powered to assess outcomes at least to school age.
Authors: Nabin Paudel; Arijit Chakraborty; Nicola Anstice; Robert J Jacobs; Jo E Hegarty; Jane E Harding; Benjamin Thompson Journal: Neonatology Date: 2017-03-03 Impact factor: 4.035
Authors: Jeffrey R Kaiser; Shasha Bai; Neal Gibson; Greg Holland; Tsai Mei Lin; Christopher J Swearingen; Jennifer K Mehl; Nahed O ElHassan Journal: JAMA Pediatr Date: 2015-10 Impact factor: 16.193
Authors: Rebecca Griffith; Joanne Elizabeth Hegarty; Jane M Alsweiler; Greg D Gamble; Robyn May; Christopher Joel Dorman McKinlay; Benjamin Thompson; Trecia Ann Wouldes; Jane E Harding Journal: Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed Date: 2020-11-04 Impact factor: 5.747
Authors: Joanne Elizabeth Hegarty; Jane Elizabeth Harding; Gregory David Gamble; Caroline Anne Crowther; Richard Edlin; Jane Marie Alsweiler Journal: PLoS Med Date: 2016-10-25 Impact factor: 11.069
Authors: Philip J Weston; Deborah L Harris; Malcolm Battin; Julie Brown; Joanne E Hegarty; Jane E Harding Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2016-05-04