Newborns requiring resuscitation: Two thirds have heart rate ≥100 beats/minute in the first minute after birth

Author:

Kibsgaard Amalie1,Ersdal Hege23,Kvaløy Jan Terje45,Eilevstjønn Joar6,Rettedal Siren12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Paediatrics Stavanger University Hospital Stavanger Norway

2. Faculty of Health Sciences University of Stavanger Stavanger Norway

3. Critical Care and Anaesthesiology Research Group Stavanger University Hospital Stavanger Norway

4. Department of Mathematics and Physics University of Stavanger Stavanger Norway

5. Department of Research, Section of Biostatistics Stavanger University Hospital Stavanger Norway

6. Strategic Research, Laerdal Medical Stavanger Norway

Abstract

AbstractAimThe aim was to study the prevalence of bradycardia at birth in newborns requiring positive pressure ventilation (PPV), distribution of first measured heart rate (HR), changes in HR before start of PPV and HR response to PPV.MethodsA population‐based study including newborns ≥30 weeks' gestation receiving PPV at birth. HR was captured immediately after birth and continuously throughout resuscitation using the dry‐electrode ECG device NeoBeat. Time of birth was registered in the Liveborn app. Provision of PPV was captured by video.ResultsWe included 98 newborns receiving PPV at birth. Among newborns with HR measured within 60 s after birth, median (quartiles) first HR was 112 (84, 149) bpm recorded 19 (14, 37) s after birth, of which 33% had first HR <100 and 10% had first HR <60 bpm respectively. First HR was widely distributed. Median HR at start PPV 69 s after birth was 129 bpm. In newborns with an initial low HR, HR typically remained low for 20 s of PPV before increasing rapidly over the next 20–30 s.ConclusionsFirst measured HR was ≥100 bpm in two thirds of newborns receiving PPV. In bradycardic infants, HR did not increase until after 20 s of PPV.

Funder

Laerdal Foundation for Acute Medicine

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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