When considering outcomes of pregnancy, size at birth is among the most important characteristics of a successful pregnancy. In addition to duration of pregnancy and the qualitative development of the fetus, the anthropometric size of a newborn baby is of considerable significance. Long before the relatively modern concept of gestational age was well understood, medical personnel recognized and recorded the size, particularly the weight, of newborn babies, and both mortality and morbidity were correlated to birth size. This persists even today, with terms such as “Low Birth Weight” infants, which do not incorporate the concept of duration of pregnancy, as an important descriptor in the public health arena. Similarly, among the first questions asked by parents, is “How much does my baby weigh?, ” a reflection of the importance of size in the common understanding of pregnancy. As a practical issue, clinicians pay most attention to weight, length and head circumference, in part because both scales and rulers are easily available and accurate. Weight is particularly emphasized, in part because the measurement of weight is particularly insensitive to interobserver measurement error. Other measures, such as surface area, BMI and weights raised to various powers (e.g. wt0.75, wt2, wt/length2) are also incommon use, but require moredifficult calculation or measurement. The close attention paid to weight is more a reflection of convenience, than biological importance, as other measures may more closely relate to matters of biological importance. For example, drug doses may be better related to surface area than weight.

Determinants of intrauterine growth / J.W. SPARKS, I. CETIN - In: Neonatal Nutrition and Metabolism / [a cura di] P.J. Thureen, W.W. Hay Jr.. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2006. - ISBN 9780521824552. - pp. 23-31 [10.1017/CBO9780511544712.003]

Determinants of intrauterine growth

I. Cetin
Ultimo
2006

Abstract

When considering outcomes of pregnancy, size at birth is among the most important characteristics of a successful pregnancy. In addition to duration of pregnancy and the qualitative development of the fetus, the anthropometric size of a newborn baby is of considerable significance. Long before the relatively modern concept of gestational age was well understood, medical personnel recognized and recorded the size, particularly the weight, of newborn babies, and both mortality and morbidity were correlated to birth size. This persists even today, with terms such as “Low Birth Weight” infants, which do not incorporate the concept of duration of pregnancy, as an important descriptor in the public health arena. Similarly, among the first questions asked by parents, is “How much does my baby weigh?, ” a reflection of the importance of size in the common understanding of pregnancy. As a practical issue, clinicians pay most attention to weight, length and head circumference, in part because both scales and rulers are easily available and accurate. Weight is particularly emphasized, in part because the measurement of weight is particularly insensitive to interobserver measurement error. Other measures, such as surface area, BMI and weights raised to various powers (e.g. wt0.75, wt2, wt/length2) are also incommon use, but require moredifficult calculation or measurement. The close attention paid to weight is more a reflection of convenience, than biological importance, as other measures may more closely relate to matters of biological importance. For example, drug doses may be better related to surface area than weight.
Settore MED/40 - Ginecologia e Ostetricia
2006
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/62598
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