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Clinical Pediatrics
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Thrombocytopenia in Neonatal Infection

Houchang D. Modanlou

Newborn Division, Miller Children's Hospital, Long Beach, University of California, Irvine, California

Oscar B. Ortiz

Newborn Division, Miller Children's Hospital, Long Beach, University of California, Irvine, California

Serial platelet counts by phase microscopy were done for three groups of neonates who were admitted to the Special Care Unit of the Miller Children's Hospital. Group 1 (78 neonates) was evaluated for septicemia. Group 2 (28 neo nates) was randomly selected sick neonates whose working diagnosis was not septicemia. Group 3 (16 neonates) was clinically normal preterm neonates (28 to 36 weeks gestation). For groups 1 and 2, platelet counts were done serially, at the time blood and cerebrospinal fluid cultures were obtained and then 12, 24, 48 and 72 hours later. For group 3, platelet counts were done on the second, seventh, fourteenth, twenty-first, and twenty-eighth day of life. Sixteen of the group 1 infants were found to have septicemia; ten of these 16 had thrombo cytopenia (platelets <100,000/mm3). In group 2, five infants had thrombocyto penia, one because of isoimmune disease and four as a result of possible disseminated intravascular coagulation. Thrombocytopenia persisted for 1 to 10 days; platelet counts of group 3 were the same as those of older children and adults.

Clinical Pediatrics, Vol. 20, No. 6, 402-407 (1981)
DOI: 10.1177/000992288102000605


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A.-K. Souid and P. D. Sadowitz
Acute Childhood Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura: Diagnosis and Treatment
Clinical Pediatrics, September 1, 1995; 34(9): 487 - 494.
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