Articles: kernicterus.
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Review
Current drug treatment options in neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia and the prevention of kernicterus.
Neonatal jaundice is a frequent problem in neonatology, but the advent of phototherapy which has simplified its treatment, it no longer represents a major concern. Early hospital discharge of neonates has now resulted in a re-emergence of kernicterus. Neonatal jaundice is principally the result of a transient deficiency of bilirubin conjugation, of a partial deficiency of hepatic bilirubin uptake and intracellular transport and of an increased enterohepatic circulation of the pigment. ⋯ In preterm infants the typical clinical feature of kernicterus is seen very rarely, and kernicterus is now a very infrequent postmortem observation. Since it is very difficult to distinguish the effects of bilirubin from other potentially toxic factors, it is difficult to give guidelines for the treatment of jaundice in very low birthweight infants other than to keep the serum bilirubin levels to a lower level than in full term infant (e.g. 10 mg/dl lower than in full term babies). The intramuscular administration of a single dose of Sn-mesoporphyrin (6 mumol/kg bodyweight) in healthy term or near-term infants seems to be a promising treatment modality for controlling hyperbilirubinaemia.