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Journal ArticleDOI

The second nation-wide survey in Japan of vitamin K deficiency in infancy

TLDR
Liver dysfunction of unknown origin may play some role in the onset of vitamin K deficiency in infancy in infants over 2 weeks of age.
Abstract
Throughout Japan a total of 543 cases of vitamin K deficiency occurring in infants over 2 weeks of age were reported from January 1981 to June 1985. Of these cases, 427 showed no obvious reasons for vitamin K deficiency; this sort of case is known as “idiopathic vitamin K deficiency in infancy”. Another 57 cases had bleeding episodes due to vitamin K deficiency associated with obvious hepatobiliary lesions, chronic diarrhoea, long-term antibiotic therapy, etc; this sort is called “secondary vitamin K deficiency in infacy”. The third group, consisting of 59 cases, was made up of the socalled “near miss” type, in which a haemorrhagic tendency, without any obvious clinical haemorrhage, was discovered by Normotest, at the time of mass screening in most cases. In the idiopathic group, 269 cases (63.0%) developed bleeding episodes between the 1st and 2nd months of age, and 387 cases (90.0%) were entirely breast-fed. Intracranial baemorrhage was observed in 353 cases (82.7%) of this group. Moreover, slight elevation of serum transaminase and direct type bilirubin levels were observed in the idiopathic group. Liver dysfunction of unknown origin may play some role in the onset of vitamin K deficiency in infancy.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Vitamin K deficiency bleeding (VKDB) in early infancy.

TL;DR: Late VKDB is largely preventable with parenteral vitamin K providing the best protection and most multi-dose oral regimens provide protection for all except a small reservoir of infants with undetected hepatobiliary disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vitamin K prophylaxis for prevention of vitamin K deficiency bleeding: a systematic review.

TL;DR: There is low-quality evidence from observational studies that routine IM administration of 1 mg of vitamin K at birth reduces the incidence of late VKDB during infancy, and it seems appropriate to administer IM vitamin K prophylaxis to all neonates at birth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vitamin K and vitamin K-dependent proteins.

TL;DR: The more recent introduction of techniques to assess vitamin K status is also leading to a deeper understanding of the nutritional and clinical role of vitamin K.
Journal ArticleDOI

The neonatal coagulation system and the vitamin K deficiency bleeding - a mini review.

TL;DR: Coagulation factors do not cross the placental barrier but are synthesized independently by the conceptus, and plasma concentrations of the naturally occurring anticoagulant proteins are significantly lower at birth than during the adult years.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Intracranial hemorrhage and vitamin K deficiency in early infancy

TL;DR: Late-onset intracranial hemorrhage related to vitamin K deficiency in 32 breast-fed infants, 31 of whom received no prophylactic vitamin K at birth is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Bleeding Syndrome in Infants due to Acquired Prothrombin Complex Deficiency: A Survey of 93 Affected Infants

TL;DR: A bleeding syndrome due to severe prothrombin complex deficiency is reported in 93 infants, most were breast fed, aged 2 weeks to 1 year and there were no serious preceding or associated diseases.
Journal Article

Fatal Intracranial Hemorrhage in a Normal Infant Secondary to Vitamin K Deficiency

TL;DR: This case is illustrative because the child was initially thought to have suffered nonaccidental trauma and the correct diagnosis was confirmed, retrospectively, after vitamin K administration, with new assays for vitamin K-deficient prothrombin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vitamin K Deficiency in Infancy in Japan

Takeshi Nagao, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1984 - 
TL;DR: There are many cases of intracranial hemorrhage due to "idiopathic" vitamin K deficiency in infancy in Japan and this may be related to abandonment of routine vitamin K administration at birth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delayed haemorrhagic disease of the newborn with extradural haematoma.

Nicholas R. Cooper, +1 more
- 20 Jan 1979 - 
TL;DR: It is shown that grey-scale ultrasonography has important diagnostic and management roles in patients with chronic pancreatic disease, as has been established in Patients with acute pancreatitis and evolving pseudocysts.
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