3P-S5-4

 

 

PHARMACOLOGIC CLOSURE OF PATENT DUCTUS ARTERIOSUS IN PREMATURE INFANTS

T.F.YEH

Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine,

National Cheng-Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan, Chinese Taipei

 

Pre-maturity was frequently associated with persistent ductus arteriosus (PAD) and respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). The increased pulmonary flow caused by the PAD shunt was believed to exacerbate the pulmonary dysfunction caused by the RDS, and there was some evidence that pulmonary function could be improved by closing the PAD. Until recently, this could be done only surgically, but when is was discovered that inhibitors of prostaglandin synthesis promoted PDA closure, this led to the clinical use of such an inhibitor, indomethacin, to close the PDA pharmacologically.

 

Reports of this use of indomethacin have been favorable, but not all cases were benefited, and some trials have suggested that indomethacin might be less effective in premature infants of very low gestational age,of very low birth weight, of higher postnatal age and in those of higher postconceptional tract has been suggested as a factor in at least some instances of poor response. Different pharmacokinetics and different plasma concentration of indomethacin may also contribute to various responses.

 

Although indomethain may be effective in promoting PDA closure, its proper place in the therapy of premature infants has not been well defined. Indomethacin can have undesirable side effects, PDA in these babies can undergo spontaneous closure; indomethacin administration was not always followed by PDA closure. In this presentation, the therapeutic regimen of indomethacin, the indications, dosage, side effect and its prevention will be discussed. The recent use of Ibuprofen for ductus closure will also be discussed.