N. Mcintosh et A. Harrison, PROLONGED PREMATURE RUPTURE OF MEMBRANES IN THE PRETERM INFANT - A 7-YEAR STUDY, European journal of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology, 57(1), 1994, pp. 1-6
Aim: to review the outcome of infants born following prolonged and pre
term rupture of the membranes. Design: retrospective and partially pro
spective observational study. Setting: babies born in and referred to
a tertiary neonatal centre. Patients: 117 preterm infants, median gest
ation (range) = 29.5 (25-36) weeks, seen over a 7 year period with mem
branes ruptured for more than 4 days; median (range) = 9 (4-119) days.
Outcome measures: survival and cause of death, compression deformitie
s, pulmonary hypoplasia and infection. Results: 23 infants died, 11 fr
om pulmonary hypoplasia and 11 as a direct consequence of prematurity
(3 from hyaline membrane disease, 7 from bronchopulmonary dysplasia an
d one from necrotising enterocolitis developed on day 17). One infant
had a lethal congenital abnormality and died untreated of overwhelming
infection. No other infants died of infection. 94% of infants were tr
eated with broad-spectrum antibiotics after birth. Compression deformi
ties were seen in 25 infants: median duration of membrane rupture 28 d
ays, range 4-119. In those without deformity, median duration was 7 da
ys, range 4-105. Sixteen infants had pulmonary hypoplasia (median 31,
range 14-119), 11 died (median 37, range 21-112) and five survived (me
dian 23, range 14-119). Although the median duration of membrane ruptu
re in infants dying of pulmonary hypoplasia was longer than in those w
ho did nit hav hypoplasia (31 compared to 7 days), 13 of 27 (48%) of i
nfants whos membranes were ruptured for 4 weeks and 4 of 7 (57%) whose
membranes were ruptured more than 70 days survived. Conclusion: death
from pulmonary hypoplasia is a much more serious problem following pr
eterm prolonged membrane rupture than is infection. Pulmonary hypoplas
ia is not inevitable even after prolonged periods of membrane rupture.