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Types:
1. Transitional (<72 hours)
2. Persistent
Definitions of a safe range:
1. Normative ranges (What the majority of neonates have reached by any given age)
2. Symptoms (jitters/tremors, cyanosis, convulsions, apneic spells, tachypnea, lethargy)
- These symptoms overlap with other conditions such as meningitis, or seizures unrelated to hypoglycemia
- While Whipple's triad (signs/symptoms, low serum glucose and resolution w/ glucose administration) is not used diagnostically, it can help to establish hypoglycemia as a cause for the symptoms and should be documented
3. Sequelae (some studies have used neurological changes or consequences of low glucose to determine a safe range)
- this has been challenging as there is a great deal of variability even in normal glucose levels, so hard to find correlations between levels and sequelae
4. physiologic changes (rise in ketones, growth hormone, decrease in insulin etc)
Based on this, the generally accepted numbers are:
Transitional: 2.6mmol
Persistent: 3.3mmol
Screening
Risk factors: SGA, LGA, IUGR, Infant of diabetic mother, preterm, maternal Labetalol use, late preterm exposure to antenatal steroids, perinatal asphyxia, metabolic conditions (e.g. CPT-1 deficiency, particularly in Inuit children, syndromes (e.g. Beckwith-Wiedmann)
Who should be screened:
1. No study which gives optimal timing and schedule for screening
2. No evidence to support routine screening of asymptomatic, low risk children
Therefore:
1. Symptomatic children should have assessment right away
- levels should be maintained >2.6mmol
2. Asymptomatic children during the transitional period
- studies have shown that low glucose (as low as 2.0mmol) doesn't necessarily have consequences
3. Persistent glucose levels below 3.3mmol should be treated
Treatment:
1. Asymptomatic hypoglycemia
- increasing breastfeeding frequency
- supplementation of feeds
- intrabuccal dextrose gel
- IV glucose
-- Studies are unclear on which of these is best long term, or if they're better than frequent breastfeeding on demand. As such, frequent breastfeeding on demand should be encouraged in at-risk children.
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