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Baby-directed umbilical cord clamping: A feasibility study

Over five percent of infants born worldwide will need help breathing after birth. Delayed cord clamping (DCC) has become the standard of care for vigorous infants. DCC in non-vigorous infants is uncommon because of logistical difficulties in providing effective resuscitation during DCC. In Baby-Dire...

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Published in:Resuscitation 2018-10, Vol.131, p.1-7
Main Authors: Blank, Douglas A., Badurdeen, Shiraz, Omar F Kamlin, C., Jacobs, Susan E., Thio, Marta, Dawson, Jennifer A., Kane, Stefan C., Dennis, Alicia T., Polglase, Graeme R., Hooper, Stuart B., Davis, Peter G.
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c383t-897fe73ef33cc8c9b307d371ffb697d1776a2fa5b1bfcde82fb5ae14afd996293
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container_title Resuscitation
container_volume 131
creator Blank, Douglas A.
Badurdeen, Shiraz
Omar F Kamlin, C.
Jacobs, Susan E.
Thio, Marta
Dawson, Jennifer A.
Kane, Stefan C.
Dennis, Alicia T.
Polglase, Graeme R.
Hooper, Stuart B.
Davis, Peter G.
description Over five percent of infants born worldwide will need help breathing after birth. Delayed cord clamping (DCC) has become the standard of care for vigorous infants. DCC in non-vigorous infants is uncommon because of logistical difficulties in providing effective resuscitation during DCC. In Baby-Directed Umbilical Cord Clamping (Baby-DUCC), the umbilical cord remains patent until the infant’s lungs are exchanging gases. We conducted a feasibility study of the Baby-DUCC technique. We obtained antenatal consent from pregnant women to enroll infants born at ≥32 weeks. Vigorous infants received ≥2 min of DCC. If the infant received respiratory support, the umbilical cord was clamped ≥60 s after the colorimetric carbon dioxide detector turned yellow. Maternal uterotonic medication was administered after umbilical cord clamping. A paediatrician and researcher entered the sterile field to provide respiratory support during a cesarean birth. Maternal and infant outcomes in the delivery room and prior to hospital discharge were analysed. Forty-four infants were enrolled, 23 delivered via cesarean section (8 unplanned) and 15 delivered vaginally (6 via instrumentation). Twelve infants were non-vigorous. ECG was the preferred method for recording HR. Two infants had a HR 100 BPM by 80 s after birth. Median time to umbilical cord clamping was 150 and 138 s in vigorous and non-vigorous infants, respectively. Median maternal blood loss was 300 ml. It is feasible to provide resuscitation to term and near-term infants during DCC, after both vaginal and cesarean births, clamping the umbilical cord only when the infant is physiologically ready.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2018.07.020
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subjects Cesarean
Cohort Studies
Constriction
Delayed cord clamping
Delivery, Obstetric - methods
ECG
Feasibility Studies
Female
Heart rate
Humans
Infant, Newborn
Male
Newborn
Pregnancy
Pulmonary Gas Exchange - physiology
Resuscitation
Resuscitation - methods
Time Factors
Umbilical Cord - blood supply
Uterotonic medication
title Baby-directed umbilical cord clamping: A feasibility study
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