rss
J Clin Pathol 2005;58:852
  • Echoes

Postmortems on very preterm infants are valuable

Postmortem examinations on very premature infants are valuable to help doctors to understand and accept the certainty of death in certain circumstances and to help them advise parents, according to a small study. They may also help in future prognoses, and their findings may lead changes in intensive care policies and protocols.

Postmortem examinations on 29 infants of < 28 weeks’ gestation who died in intensive care within 28 days after their birth resulted in new diagnoses in no less than 79% and significant change in diagnosis in 28%, when compared with the clinical diagnosis. Injuries caused by treatment were evident in 41% of the group and were considered to be the main cause of death in 4% (four infants). Elsewhere published rates are 4–15%. Some deaths were due to complications of extreme prematurity such as lung disease, but complications of pregnancy or labour also featured.

The examinations were performed by an experienced perinatal pathologist at a major paediatric centre in New Zealand on 29 of 54 infants meeting the criteria who died during January 1995–December 2003.

Extreme prematurity can be given as the cause of death on the death certificate when extremely preterm infants die, but this tells us little and does not advance our knowledge, especially as infants this young are less likely to have postmortem examinations anyway.

This Article

Services

  1. Request permissions

Responses

  1. Submit a response
  2. No responses published

Social bookmarking

Latest from JCP Education

Latest from JCP Education

Register for free content


Free sample
This recent issue is free to all users to allow everyone the opportunity to see the full scope and typical content of JCP.
View free sample issue >>

Free archive
The full back archive is now available for JCP. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006, back to volume 1 issue 1.
Register to access the free archive >>

Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.

  • Latest Pathology jobs

    Latest Pathology jobs