Schulte Rachael, Jordan Lori C, Morad Anna, Naftel Robert P, Wellons John C, Sidonio Robert
Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
Division of Pediatric Neurology, Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
Pediatr Neurol. 2014 Jun;50(6):564-8. doi: 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2014.02.013. Epub 2014 Feb 28.
Newborns are at risk for vitamin K deficiency and subsequent bleeding unless supplemented at birth. Vitamin K deficiency bleeding is an acquired coagulopathy in newborn infants because of accumulation of inactive vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors, which leads to an increased bleeding tendency. Supplementation of vitamin K at birth has been recommended in the United States since 1961 and successfully reduced the risk of major bleeding. Refusal or omission of vitamin K prophylaxis is increasing and puts newborn infants at risk for life-threatening bleeding.
Over an eight month period, we encountered seven infants with confirmed vitamin K deficiency; five of these patients developed vitamin K deficiency bleeding.
The mean age of the seven infants with vitamin K deficiency was 10.3 weeks (range, 7-20 weeks); manifestations ranged from overt bleeding to vomiting, poor feeding, and lethargy. None of the infants had received vitamin K at birth, and all were found to have profound derangement of coagulation parameters, which corrected rapidly with administration of vitamin K in IV or intramuscular form. Four of the seven infants had intracranial hemorrhage; two of these infants required urgent neurosurgical intervention.
Supplementation of vitamin K at birth for all newborns prevents major hemorrhagic complications, such as intracranial bleeding, due to vitamin K deficiency. Parental refusal of vitamin K is increasingly common. It is critical that health care providers and the public be made aware of the varied presentation of this preventable acquired coagulopathy.
新生儿有维生素K缺乏及随后出血的风险,除非在出生时进行补充。维生素K缺乏性出血是新生儿的一种获得性凝血病,原因是无活性的维生素K依赖凝血因子蓄积,导致出血倾向增加。自1961年以来,美国就建议在出生时补充维生素K,这已成功降低了大出血的风险。拒绝或遗漏维生素K预防措施的情况日益增多,使新生儿面临危及生命的出血风险。
在八个月的时间里,我们遇到了7名确诊维生素K缺乏的婴儿;其中5名患者发生了维生素K缺乏性出血。
7名维生素K缺乏婴儿的平均年龄为10.3周(范围7 - 20周);表现从明显出血到呕吐、喂养不佳和嗜睡不等。所有婴儿出生时均未接受维生素K,且均被发现凝血参数严重紊乱,静脉或肌肉注射维生素K后迅速得到纠正。7名婴儿中有4名发生颅内出血;其中2名婴儿需要紧急神经外科干预。
对所有新生儿在出生时补充维生素K可预防因维生素K缺乏导致的重大出血并发症,如颅内出血。父母拒绝维生素K的情况越来越普遍。医护人员和公众必须了解这种可预防的获得性凝血病的多种表现,这一点至关重要。