Do Cerebral and Renal Saturations Measured With Near-infrared Spectroscopy Correlate With Echocardiographic Markers of Perfusion and Cardiac Performance in Congenital Heart Disease?
Neonatal patients with congenital heart defects (CHD) have changing physiology in the context of transitional period. Patients with CHD are at risk of low perfusion status or abnormal pulmonary blood flow. Near infrared spectroscopy has been used in neonatal intensive care units (NICU) to measure end-organ perfusion. The investigator plan on monitoring newborns with CHD admitted to the NICU with NIRS and echocardiography during the first week of life and correlate measures of perfusion from Dopplers to cerebral and renal NIRS.
• A prospective study will be conducted of all newborns with tetralogy of fallot, trucus arteriosus, D-transposition of great arteries, PS, AS, coarctation of the aorta, DILV, AVC, DORV, HLHS, TA and PAIVS consecutively admitted at our institution (Montreal Children's Hospital) neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) from January 2018 to January 2020. Patients with CHD will be compared to a control population of term infants admitted and monitored in the NICU with antenatal suspicion of coarctation, ruled-out postnatally.