THURSDAY, July 22 (HealthDay News) -- In a new study that looked
at the use of nitric oxide in premature infants, researchers found that
lung function didn't improve in babies who were not black, although one
expert said the treatment may help some infants.
Laboratory tests have suggested that nitric oxide may be able to help
stimulate lung growth in premature newborns, who often can't breathe
properly because their lungs aren't fully developed, explained Dr. Steven
H. Abman, director of the Pediatric Heart Lung Center at University of
Colorado School of Medicine and The Children's Hospital. Abman was not
involved in the new study but is familiar with the findings.
Studies in babies haven't consistently shown that nitric oxide
treatment helps babies as a whole, Abman noted. "The questions are whether
we're giving too little nitric oxide, or if we're picking the wrong babies
to treat," he said.
In the new study by Jean-Christophe Mercier, of the University of
Paris, and an international research team, doctors gave either nitric
oxide gas or a placebo to 800 preterm infants who were born between 24
weeks and just under 29 weeks of gestation. The babies had mild to
moderate lung problems and were treated for seven to 21 days.
The nitric oxide treatment didn't appear to help the babies avoid
future lung problems and brain damage, the researchers found. The results
suggest that "such a preventive treatment strategy is unsuccessful," they
wrote in the report, published online July 22 in The Lancet.
However, the treatment seemed to be somewhat effective in black babies,
and other studies have shown they may be helped more than others, the
study authors noted.
Abman suggested that the babies in the study may have been too healthy
to need the treatment, and more research is needed.
Nitric oxide is found in mammals and should not be confused with
nitrous oxide, or "laughing gas," which is used as an anesthetic.
More information
For more about premature babies, try the U.S. National Library of
Medicine.
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