Wales J K, Carney S, Gibson A T
University Department of Paediatrics, Sheffield Children's Hospital, UK.
Horm Res. 1997;48 Suppl 1:2-10. doi: 10.1159/000191253.
Accurate measurements of both healthy and premature neonates are possible but rarely performed. Routine anthropometry is often not performed at all or with large measurement errors due to inadequate training of personnel or inappropriate equipment. Sick neonates are often considered unsuitable for anthropometry and growth is wrongly equated with weight gain. Gain in length may be disturbed by poor health and permanent extrauterine growth retardation and changes in body proportions induced in some survivors of neonatal intensive care. Drug treatments may have profound effects on length gain and the relationship of length to weight.