Introduction: Neonatal gastric perforation (NGP) is a rare, life-threatening surgical emergency that predominantly affects premature and extremely low birth weight (ELBW) infants and remains associated with high mortality.
Case presentation: A 600 g female infant born at 25/26 weeks of gestational age developed necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) during the third postnatal week and deteriorated with abdominal distension and pneumoperitoneum. Emergency laparotomy on day 24 revealed a single posterior gastric wall perforation with circumferential necrotic margins; the nasogastric tube tip was located at the defect. After minimal debridement and primary two-layer closure, the infant survived a prolonged intensive care course complicated by recurrent sepsis, cholestasis, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, and later adhesive obstruction requiring adhesiolysis.
Conclusions: Gastric perforation may represent an uncommon manifestation of severe NEC in ELBW infants. Delayed onset, necrotic margins, and systemic inflammatory deterioration may favor ischemic NEC-related injury over iatrogenic trauma. Early radiographic evaluation and prompt surgical exploration are crucial for survival.
Tag Archives: extremely low birth weight
Drug Closure of a Patent Ductus Arteriosus in an Extremely Low Birth Weight Premature Newborn. A Case Report
Introduction: Patent ductus arteriosus involves maintaining the permeability of the vascular ductus located between the pulmonary artery and the descending aorta, due to the failure of transition from foetal to adult type circulation. This malformation is characteristic to premature newborns with extremely low birth weight. The main pathophysiological factors identified in this pathology are immaturity of the smooth muscles, presence of vasodilator mediators and persistent hypoxaemia. Ductal-dependent cardiac malformations require drug therapy for keeping the permeability of the ductus arteriosus until the time of corrective surgery.
Case presentation: We present the case of an extremely low birth weight premature new-born, derived from twin pregnancy with suspected specific pathology, respectively feto-fetal transfusion syndrome, admitted to the Regional Centre of Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Tîrgu-Mureş.
Premature newborn with gestational age 31-32 weeks, extremely low birth weight, derived from twin pregnancy, with adequate prenatal follow up, was born by caesarean section for severe intrauterine growth restriction secondary to feto-fetal transfusion syndrome suspicion. The newborn developed respiratory distress syndrome by surfactant deficiency, intraventricular-haemorrhage grade I/II, and severe retinopathy. The detection of a systolic murmur in the second week of life, the diastolic theft revealed by trans-fontanellar ultrasound as well as lowered diastolic blood pressure values raised the suspicion of a patent ductus arteriosus and therefore specific treatment with ibuprofen, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, was initiated. Progressive alteration of the newborn`s condition and the evidence of a coarctation of the aorta imposed the initiation of Prostaglandin E1 therapy and subsequent surgical correction.
Conclusions: Although beneficial, prophylactic or therapeutic closure of persistent ductus arteriosus may worsen the evolution of a newborn with a “silent” cardiac malformation and associated pathology.










