Title: NEONATOLOGY
1NEONATOLOGY
- Branch of medicine that focuses on newborns
2Motor Development
- Basic REFLEXES, unlearned, organized, involuntary
responses that occur automatically in the
presence of certain stimuli, represent behavior
that has survival value for the infant .
3MORO (STARTLE)
- Loud sounds or being dropped a few inches
- Spread arms and stretch out fingers
- Bring arms back to body and clench fingers
4STEPPING
- Baby held vertically
- Appear to be walking
5GRASPING (PALMAR)
- Applies to toes as well as fingers
- Will close their fingers over any object when it
is placed in their palm - May be able to support full weight for up to a
minute
6ROOTING
- When cheek is touched, babies move mouth toward
the stimulus - Toward the hand that pushes
7SUCKING
- If a finger is put in
- a babys mouth they
- suck and make
- rhythmic movements
- with the mouth and
- tongue
8- Some reflexes stay throughout life others
disappear over time. - Some researchers believe reflexes stimulate the
brain toward development. - Reflexes are genetically determined and universal
and may be remnants from the past. - Reflexes can serve as helpful diagnostic tools
for pediatricians because they appear and
disappear on a regular timetable.
9HIGH RISK INFANTS
- Premature
- 3 weeks before
- 38-week term
- Low birth weight
- Weigh less than
- 5.5 lbs average
- is 7.5 lbs
10CAUSES
- Poor prenatal care
- Poor nutrition
- Mothers age (over 35 or under 19)
- Mothers reproductive condition
- Too many pregnancies too close together
- Mothers drinking, smoking, and drug use habits
11RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME
- Lack pulmonary surfactant in their lungs
- Before birth in the amniotic sac
- Lubricates the lungs
- Does not develop until the fetus is about 35
weeks old - Drip surfactant into lungs of premature
- Cut rate of death by more than 50
12ISOLETTE (INCUBATOR)
- Controls temperature
- and air flow
- Protects the baby
- from germs
13PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
- Smaller eyes
- Narrower, almost pointy heads
- Relatively long distance between their noses and
months - Parents may be less likely to interact with a
baby whose looks disappoint them
14BEHAVIORAL CHARACTERISTICS
- No regular wake-sleep pattern
- Cry more and their cries sound more distressed
- Particularly hard to quiet make them more
vulnerable to neglect or abuse - Narrower band of arousal
- Tend to smile less and less responsive to
parents efforts to play with them
15Effects of Massage Touch on Weight Gain
The weight gain of premature infants who were
systematically massaged is greater than those who
did not receive the massage.
16INDIVIDUALITY OF NEWBORNS
- Easy
- Biologically regular and rhythmical
- Regular sleeping and eating
- Accepts new food and people
- Not easily frustrated
- Difficult
- Withdraw from new stimuli adapt slowly
- Mood often negative
- Slow-to-warm
- Withdraw from activities quietly
- Show interest in new situations only if allowed
to do so gradually
17BRAIN AT BIRTH
- Born early in brain development
- 25 adult weight
- Major portion brain growth outside the womb
- Lower brain better developed brain stem,
cerebellum, limbic system - Breath, eat sleep, control of vital organs
- Severe malnutrition inadequate brain growth
mental retardation
18- Infants are born with between 100 and 200 billion
NEURONS ( the nerve cells of the nervous system) - All the neurons they will ever have
- As the infant's experience in the world
increases, neurons that do not become
interconnected become unnecessary and die off
19The Neuron
The basic element of the nervous system
20MYELIN SHEATH
- Insulating sheath
- Found on some neurons
- Speeds neural transmission
21Networks of neurons become more complex over the
first few years of life.
Neuron Networks
22BRAIN MATURATION
- First Two Years
- Triple in size
- Reach 75 to 80 adult weight dimensions
- What grows are axons dendrites that connect
neurons the myelin
23CORTEX
- Mantle of cells covering the cerebral hemispheres
- Immature at birth
- Areas develop at different rates
- Sensory information leads cortex to grow neural
connections to develop
24The Major State Occupying the Infant Is Sleep
- On average, newborns sleep 16-17 hours daily,
ranging from 10-20 hours a day. - Sleep stages are fitful and "out of sync" during
early infancy. - By the end of the first year most infants are
sleeping through the night .
25 REM SLEEP
- REM - RAPID EYE MOVEMENT - period of sleep found
in adults and children that is associated with
dreaming) - Active rem-like sleep takes up half an infants
sleep at first. - Researchers think the function of REM sleep in
infants is to provide a means for the brain to
stimulate itself (autostimulation).
26REM Sleep Through the Lifespan
REM sleep increases the total amount of sleep
falls as we age.
27SUDDEN INFANT DEATH SYNDROME
- Leading killer of infants 16 0f babies who die
before their first birthday - - 90 before 6 months of age, mostly between 2
4 months - Presently no known medical explanation
- - possible causes lack of breastfeeding, upper
respiratory infections, respiratory system
collapse
during sleep, exposure to
secondhand smoke - - risk factors smoking during pregnancy,
premature birth - Occurs most frequently in the winter
- In the US, rates highest among Native Americans
poor African Americans
28SLEEP POSITION
- Past lay face down to prevent choking in case
they spit up - Now lay babies on back, SIDS deaths have
dramatically decreased - British researchers putting babies on its side
reduced risk, but not as much
29Declining Rates of SIDS
US rates have dropped dramatically as parents put
babies to sleep on backs.