(Thematic Excellence Program 2021 Health Subprogram (TKP2021-EGA-10)) Támogató: Emberi
Erőforrások Minisztériuma
Less invasive surfactant administration techniques, together with nasal continuous
airway pressure (LISA-nCPAP) ventilation, an emerging noninvasive ventilation (NIV)
technique in neonatology, are gaining more significance, even in extremely premature
newborns (ELBW), under 27 weeks of gestational age. In this review, studies on LISA-nCPAP
are compiled with an emphasis on short- and long-term morbidities associated with
prematurity. Several perinatal preventative and therapeutic investigations are also
discussed in order to start integrated therapies as numerous organ-saving techniques
in addition to lung-protective ventilations. Two thirds of immature newborns can start
their lives on NIV, and one third of them never need mechanical ventilation. With
adjuvant intervention, these ratios are expected to be increased, resulting in better
outcomes. Optimized cardiopulmonary transition, especially physiologic cord clamping,
could have an additively beneficial effect on patient outcomes gained from NIV. Organ
development and angiogenesis are strictly linked not only in the immature lung and
retina, but also possibly in the kidney, and optimized interventions using angiogenic
growth factors could lead to better morbidity-free survival. Corticosteroids, caffeine,
insulin, thyroid hormones, antioxidants, N-acetylcysteine, and, moreover, the immunomodulatory
components of mother's milk are also discussed as adjuvant treatments, since immature
newborns deserve more complex neonatal interventions.