Association between SMOFlipid and impaired brain development on term-equivalent age brain magnetic resonance imaging in very preterm infants

被引:0
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作者
Mountasser M. Al-Mouqdad [1 ]
Belal Alshaikh [2 ]
Haider H. Sumaily [1 ]
Nabeel A. Alodhaidan [1 ]
Latifah AlMahmoud [1 ]
Ameen A. Almotiri [1 ]
Mousa A. Alkhourmi [3 ]
Mazen M. Abounassif [4 ]
Ahmed F. Beh [4 ]
Mashael A. Alawad [5 ]
Amani A. Albraiki [6 ]
Aziza A. Alqarni [6 ]
Maha R. Al-Anazi [6 ]
Nadia A. Basodan [6 ]
Fuddah M. Assiri [6 ]
Suzan S. Asfour [7 ]
机构
[1] King Saud Medical City,Neonatal Intensive Care, Hospital of Pediatrics
[2] University of Calgary,Department of Pediatrics, Cumming School of Medicine
[3] King Saud Medical City,Pediatric Gastroenterology Department, Hospital of Pediatrics
[4] King Saud Medical City,Radiology Department, Hospital of Pediatrics
[5] King Saud Medical City,General Pediatrics Department, Hospital of Pediatrics
[6] King Saud Medical City,Pharmacy Department, Pharmaceutical Care Services
[7] King Saud Medical City,Clinical Pharmacy Department, Pharmaceutical Care Services
关键词
Brain morphology; Growth; Lipid emulsion; Magnetic resonance imaging; Parenteral nutrition; Premature infant;
D O I
10.1186/s12887-024-05153-8
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Soybean oil, medium-chain triglycerides, olive oil, and fish oil (SMOFlipid) is used without evidence of benefits. We investigated the relationship between lipid emulsions and brain injury in term-equivalent age magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 148 very preterm infants with a birth weight of < 1500 g at ≤ 32 gestational weeks in a neonatal intensive care unit. Infants who received soybean-based lipid emulsions between January 2015 and December 2018 were compared with those who received SMOFlipids between January 2019 and December 2022. A negative binomial generalized linear model was applied for bivariate analysis. Modified log-Poisson regression with generalized linear models and a robust variance estimator (Huber–White) were applied to adjust for potential confounders. The Kidokoro score was used to determine if lipid emulsion type would affect brain morphology and growth at term-equivalent age. Eighty-six (58.9%) received SMOFlipid. SMOFlipid was associated with lower focal signal abnormality, myelination delay, increased extracerebral space, and cerebellar volume reduction (P = 0.02, P = 0.007, P = 0.01, P = 0.02, respectively). SMOFlipidis are associated with brain insult, especially in white matter, cortical gray matter, and the cerebellum. Well-designed studies are needed to investigate the effect of lipid emulsions on the central nervous system.
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