AbstractObjectiveto evaluate neonatal sepsis as a risk factor for abnormal neuromotor and cognitive development in very low birth weight preterm infants at 12 months of corrected age.Methodsthis was a prospective cohort study that followed the neuromotor and cognitive development of 194 very low birth weight preterm infants discharged from a public neonatal intensive care unit. The Bayley Scale of Infant Development (second edition) at 12 months of corrected age was used. The outcomes were the results of the clinical/neurological evaluation and the scores of the psychomotor development index (PDI) and mental development index (MDI) of the Bayley Scale of Infant Development II. The association between neonatal sepsis and neuromotor developme...
AbstractBackgroundLate-onset sepsis is a relatively common complication particularly of preterm birt...
Sepsis is a frequent cause of death in very-low-birthweight infants and often results in neurologica...
Objectives To document associations between confirmed and suspected neonatal infection and motor, co...
AbstractObjectiveto evaluate neonatal sepsis as a risk factor for abnormal neuromotor and cognitive ...
Objective: to evaluate neonatal sepsis as a risk factor for abnormal neuromotor and cognitive develo...
Sepsis is commonly experienced by infants born very preterm (<32 weeks gestational age and/or <1500 ...
Abstract Aims The study investigated a putative association between early-onset-sepsis (EOS) and poo...
AbstractObjectiveto establish the influence of late-onset sepsis on neurodevelopment of preterm infa...
AbstractObjectiveTo establish the influence of late‐onset sepsis on neurodevelopment of preterm infa...
Background Late onset sepsis is still a common complication of admission to the neonatal intensive c...
Late-onset sepsis is associated with impaired neurodevelopmental outcome in preterm infants. This pr...
ObjectiveThis study aimed to investigate neonatal sepsis as potential risk factor for adverse behavi...
OBJECTIVE: To establish the influence of late-onset sepsis on neurodevelopment of preterm infants w...
OBJECTIVE: Neonatal sepsis causes high mortality and morbidity in preterm infants, but less is known...
Background: Late-onset sepsis is a relatively common complication particularly of preterm birth that...
AbstractBackgroundLate-onset sepsis is a relatively common complication particularly of preterm birt...
Sepsis is a frequent cause of death in very-low-birthweight infants and often results in neurologica...
Objectives To document associations between confirmed and suspected neonatal infection and motor, co...
AbstractObjectiveto evaluate neonatal sepsis as a risk factor for abnormal neuromotor and cognitive ...
Objective: to evaluate neonatal sepsis as a risk factor for abnormal neuromotor and cognitive develo...
Sepsis is commonly experienced by infants born very preterm (<32 weeks gestational age and/or <1500 ...
Abstract Aims The study investigated a putative association between early-onset-sepsis (EOS) and poo...
AbstractObjectiveto establish the influence of late-onset sepsis on neurodevelopment of preterm infa...
AbstractObjectiveTo establish the influence of late‐onset sepsis on neurodevelopment of preterm infa...
Background Late onset sepsis is still a common complication of admission to the neonatal intensive c...
Late-onset sepsis is associated with impaired neurodevelopmental outcome in preterm infants. This pr...
ObjectiveThis study aimed to investigate neonatal sepsis as potential risk factor for adverse behavi...
OBJECTIVE: To establish the influence of late-onset sepsis on neurodevelopment of preterm infants w...
OBJECTIVE: Neonatal sepsis causes high mortality and morbidity in preterm infants, but less is known...
Background: Late-onset sepsis is a relatively common complication particularly of preterm birth that...
AbstractBackgroundLate-onset sepsis is a relatively common complication particularly of preterm birt...
Sepsis is a frequent cause of death in very-low-birthweight infants and often results in neurologica...
Objectives To document associations between confirmed and suspected neonatal infection and motor, co...