Read Oxford Handbook of Midwifery Online
Authors: Janet Medforth,Sue Battersby,Maggie Evans,Beverley Marsh,Angela Walker
Screening
Routine neonatal screening is offered for five disorders:
Collecting the sample
Parents will receive an information leaflet, and have the reasons for the test explained to them, in the third trimester of the pregnancy. The reasons should also be discussed with them again just before the proce- dure is carried out.
The health professional responsible for the baby will usually take the sample on day 6 of milk feeding, and will also record the event in the maternity notes.
Gather equipment
The procedure
CHAPTER 23
Care of the newborn
616
Phenylketonuria
Screening
2 It takes a few days for levels of blood phenylalanine to accumulate, therefore the screening test is usually done after 6 days of milk feeding or at least 48h of intravenous feed containing protein.
Guthrie’s test
Introduced by Dr Robert Guthrie, this test was originally based on inhibi- tion of bacterial growth. It is now carried out using a fluorometric assay to test for PKU. A 6.25mm diameter disc is punched out of a dried blood spot on a blood-screening card. Water is added and the sample is then left to dry. Reagents are added to cause the phenylalanine to fluoresce and the fluorescence is measured. Any rise in serum phenylalanine above a given standard stands out on the chart. This will be followed up with further tests on the original sample before confirmation of the diagnosis with the parents.
3
,
4
Congenital hypothyroidism
METABOLIC DISORDERS AND THE NEONATAL BLOOD SPOT TEST
617
Screening
The test involves punching a small hole out of the blood-screening card. A radioactive marker is added to the blood spot, the sample is left overnight and the TSH is measured the next day.
Cystic fibrosis
Screening
Sickle cell disorders and thalassaemia major
and making the baby more prone to serious infections.
All parents in these situations will be carriers and are usually offered genetic counselling. CLIMB—Children Living With Inherited Metabolic Diseases—is a support group for parents and health professionals.
4,7
Medium-chain acyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD)
CHAPTER 23
Care of the newborn
618
Management of MCADD
increases with age.
4
,
8
This page intentionally left blank
CHAPTER 23
Care of the newborn
620
Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH)
In its severest form, developmental dysplasia of the hip is one of the most common congenital malformations.
1
Neonatal screening programmes, based on clinical screening examinations, have been established for more than 40 years but their effectiveness remains controversial. The longer- term outcomes of developmental hip dysplasia with its contribution to premature degenerative hip disorders in adult life, and the benefits and harms of newborn screening are not clearly understood. High quality studies of the adult outcomes of developmental hip dysplasia and the childhood origins of early degenerative hip disease are needed, as are ran- domized trials to assess the effectiveness and safety of neonatal screening and early treatment.
2
It is becoming more common for midwives with appropriate training to be responsible for screening the hips as part of the holistic assessment of the newborn. Approximately 1.5 per 1000 babies is born with a dislocatable or subluxable hip. This used to be called congenital dislocation of the hips but the terminology has changed to reflect its potentially progressive nature.
If the condition remains untreated the hip will function well initially but ultimately lead to problems with walking and premature degenerative disease of the hip.
Risk factors
•
Family history of hip dysplasia
Diagnosis
The diagnosis is made in the first instance by physical examination and then confirmed by ultrasound scan. Two methods are used.
Carrying out the examination
DEVELOPMENTAL DYSPLASIA OF THE HIP (DDH)
621
Should either test be positive the result should be sensitively explained to the parents and arrangements made to confirm the diagnosis by ultrasound scan. Following diagnosis the most common treatment is for the baby to wear a Pavlik’s harness or hip spica cast which gently keeps the hips in abduction until the hip capsule tightens and the hips are kept in place by the normal action of the ligaments.
Recommended reading
Stricker SJ, Barone SR (2001). Tips about hips in children.
International Pediatrics
16
, 196–206.
CHAPTER 23
Care of the newborn
622
Birth injuries
Birth injuries are most commonly caused by trauma or mechanical dif- ficulty at delivery. Head injuries are most common, followed by injury to limbs, internal organs, and the skin.
Head injury
Damage to a branch of the seventh cranial nerve occurs when pressure
is applied on the facial nerve as the head emerges at delivery. The
affected side shows no movement when the baby cries, the eye is permanently open, and the mouth droops. This may affect the baby’s feeding ability if severe. Invariably full recovery occurs within hours or up to several days. Care of the affected eye is important to prevent corneal damage.
Other injuries
BIRTH INJURIES
623
brachial plexus. The arm hangs loosely from the shoulder with the palm of the hand turned backwards in the ‘waiter’s tip’ position. Physiotherapy is the main treatment, again this may be slow but the condition does usually resolve completely.