Infantools | Hematology FeaturedImage

Polycythemia

Polycythemia is defined by venous hemoglobin concentration > 220 g/l or by hematocrit value > 0.65 during the first week of life. It correlates clinically with hyperviscosity syndrome.

The common causes:

  • chronic intrauterine hypoxia
  • twin-twin transfusion syndrome in monochorionic-diamniotic twins (recipient twin)
  • excessive placental transfusion

Diagnosis

Clinical signs

Laboratory findings

  • venous hemoglobin concentration > 220 g/l or hematocrit value > 0.65 during the first week of life

Therapy

General

  • treatment for individual symptoms
  • parenteral fluids (hypoglycemia, jaundice)
  • careful enteral nutrition (variable perfusion of gastrointestinal tract)

Specific

  • partial exchange transfusion => reduce hematocrit < 0.60

References

① Sarkar S, Rosenkrantz TS. Neonatal polycythemia and hyperviscosity. Semin Fetal Neonatal Med. 2008;13(4):248-255. doi:10.1016/j.siny.2008.02.003

Similar Posts

  • Leukocyte abnormalities

    There are significant differences (leukocyte abnormalities) in white blood cell (WBC) total and differential counts between newborns and older children. Alterations in WBC total and differential count can be an early sign of infection (leukopenia, leukocytosis, shift to the left). Total WBC counts should be always adjusted for given postnatal age – see Table. I/T index…

  • Prematurity

    Preterm birth is defined as any birth before 37 completed weeks of gestation (37+0). It has been estimated to account for up to 11 % of all births. Preterm birth is a substantial cause of neonatal and pediatric morbidity and mortality. Prematurity is the single most important cause of death in the…

  • Bleeding disorders

    Newborns (preterm in particular) have relatively low levels of pro-coagulation factors (vitamin K dependent factors), diminished platelet functions (their levels are similar to adults), as well as low anti-coagulation factors (antithrombin III, protein C). Nevertheless, both pro- and anti-coagulation systems are in balance and hemorrhagic or thrombotic events are not usually observed. The levels of fibrinogen, factor V,…

  • Acute abdomen

    Acute abdomen events arise from a number of diseases based on the predominant pathophysiology. They require urgent revision. Basic division of acute abdomen in newborns: congenital gastrointestinal malformations non-inflammatory→ ileus of prematurity (IOP)→ spontaneous intestinal perforation (SIP)→ incarceration of inguinal hernia→ testicular torsion (unilateral orchidectomy) inflammatory→ necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC)→ peritonitis (usually…

  • Hyperbilirubinemia

    Hyperbilirubinemia is defined as serum bilirubin concentration > 25 μmol/l. However, clinical presentation (jaundice (icterus) – yellowish colouring of the skin, sclera and mucosa) is apparent in newborns usually around hyperbilirubinemia of 80-100 μmol/l. It is one of the most common clinical and laboratory findings in both term and preterm infants (antenatally, placenta is responsible for…

  • Thrombophilia

    Neonatal thrombophilia can cause both arterial and venous thromboembolic events. Thrombophilia results from the disrupted hemostatic system that normally consists of 4 integrated components: the coagulation system, endothelium and regulatory proteins, platelets, and fibrinolysis. The peak incidence of pediatric thromboembolic events occurs in neonates and infants < 1 year of age….

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.