D. Moster et al., The association of Apgar score with subsequent death and cerebral palsy: Apopulation-based study in term infants, J PEDIAT, 138(6), 2001, pp. 798-803
Objective: To estimate the risk of adverse outcomes for newborns with a low
Apgar score.
Study design: Population-based cohort study. All 235,165 children born betw
een 1983 and 1987 in Norway with a birth weight of at least 2500 g and no r
egistered birth defects were followed up from birth to age 8 to 12 years by
linkage of 3 national registries. Outcomes were death and cerebral palsy (
CP).
Results: Five-minute Apgar scores of 0 to 3 were recorded for 0.1%, and sco
res of 4 to 6 were recorded for 0.6% of the children. Compared with childre
n who had 5-minute Apgar scores of 7 to 10, children who had scores of 0 to
3 had a 386-fold increased risk for neonatal death (95% CI: 270-552) and a
n 81-fold (48-138) increased risk for CP. If Apgar scores at both 1 and 5 m
inutes were 0 to 3, the risks for neonatal death and CP were increased 642-
fold (442-934) and 145-fold (85-248), respectively, compared with scores of
7 to 10.
Conclusion: The strong association of low Apgar scores with death and CP in
this population with a low occurrence of low scores shows that the Apgar s
core remains important for the early identification of infants at increased
risk for serious and fatal conditions.