| Literature DB >> 3661911 |
T Matsuzaka1, M Yoshinaga, Y Tsuji.
Abstract
To determine the most effective way of preventing intracranial hemorrhage due to vitamin K deficiency in infants, we first performed a comparative study using Normotest on the effects of several regimens for the oral administration of vitamin K2. Based on the results, we gave vitamin K2 orally, 2 mg, at birth, and then, 4 mg, at 1 week of age (on discharge from the newborn nursery) to all infants except premature and low-birth-weight infants born in Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan. Since then, as the number of infants with vitamin K2 prophylaxis increased, patients with intracranial hemorrhage due to vitamin K deficiency decreased in number, and no patient was found in 1984. The incidence of this disease in infants with vitamin K prophylaxis was 1/68,500, which was one-twentieth of that (1/3,500 live births) before the period when most neonates received vitamin K prophylaxis. From the results, we concluded that the oral administration of vitamin K2 at birth and 1 week of age prevents this disease.Entities:
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Year: 1987 PMID: 3661911 DOI: 10.1016/s0387-7604(87)80050-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Dev ISSN: 0387-7604 Impact factor: 1.961