Rapid infusion of sodium bicarbonate and albumin into high-risk premature infants soon after birth: a controlled, prospective trial. Bland, R. D., Clarke, T. L., & Harden, L. B. American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 124:263–267, February, 1976.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
We conducted a controlled, prospective trial to evaluate the effectiveness of rapidly infusing sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) and salt-poor albumin into high-risk, premature infants in the first 2 hours of life. Fifty-three infants, randomized into one of four treatment groups, received 8 ml. per kilogram of a solution containing either (A) glucose in water, (B) salt-poor albumin, (C) NaHCO3, or (D) a combination of albumin and NaHCO3. After the initial infusion, the babies received no colloid or alkali solutions until 4 hours of age. We managed them supportively with warmth, appropriate oxygen administration, isotonic fluid infusion, and close monitoring. Among the infants who received alkali, 14 of 26 acquired the respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), 11 died, and four had intracranial hemorrhage. Among babies who received no alkali, RDS occurred in 11 of 27, 5 died, and none had intracranial hemorrhage. These results do not support the common practice of rapidly infusing NaHCO3 into high-risk, premature infants, and they suggest that the early management of such infants needs renewed critical evaluation.
@Article{Bland1976,
  author          = {Bland, R. D. and Clarke, T. L. and Harden, L. B.},
  journal         = {American journal of obstetrics and gynecology},
  title           = {Rapid infusion of sodium bicarbonate and albumin into high-risk premature infants soon after birth: a controlled, prospective trial.},
  year            = {1976},
  issn            = {0002-9378},
  month           = feb,
  pages           = {263--267},
  volume          = {124},
  abstract        = {We conducted a controlled, prospective trial to evaluate the effectiveness of rapidly infusing sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) and salt-poor albumin into high-risk, premature infants in the first 2 hours of life. Fifty-three infants, randomized into one of four treatment groups, received 8 ml. per kilogram of a solution containing either (A) glucose in water, (B) salt-poor albumin, (C) NaHCO3, or (D) a combination of albumin and NaHCO3. After the initial infusion, the babies received no colloid or alkali solutions until 4 hours of age. We managed them supportively with warmth, appropriate oxygen administration, isotonic fluid infusion, and close monitoring. Among the infants who received alkali, 14 of 26 acquired the respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), 11 died, and four had intracranial hemorrhage. Among babies who received no alkali, RDS occurred in 11 of 27, 5 died, and none had intracranial hemorrhage. These results do not support the common practice of rapidly infusing NaHCO3 into high-risk, premature infants, and they suggest that the early management of such infants needs renewed critical evaluation.},
  chemicals       = {Albumins, Bicarbonates, Carbon Dioxide, Sodium},
  citation-subset = {IM},
  completed       = {1976-03-30},
  country         = {United States},
  doi             = {10.1016/0002-9378(76)90154-x},
  issn-linking    = {0002-9378},
  issue           = {3},
  keywords        = {Acidosis, drug therapy; Albumins, administration & dosage, therapeutic use; Bicarbonates, administration & dosage, therapeutic use; Carbon Dioxide, blood; Cerebral Hemorrhage, mortality; Female; Hawaii; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Infant, Newborn; Infant, Premature, Diseases, blood, drug therapy, mortality; Infusions, Parenteral; Male; Prospective Studies; Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Newborn, mortality; Sodium, administration & dosage, therapeutic use; Time Factors},
  nlm-id          = {0370476},
  owner           = {NLM},
  pii             = {0002-9378(76)90154-X},
  pmid            = {2013},
  pubmodel        = {Print},
  pubstate        = {ppublish},
  revised         = {2019-06-15},
}

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