Table of Contents
•I. THE FIELD OF NEONATAL-PERINATAL MEDICINE
1. From infant hatcheries to intensive care: Some highlights of the century of neonatal medicine
2. Epidemiology and Perinatal services
One: Epidemiology
Two: Perinatal Services
3. Ethics in perinatal and neonatal medicine
4. Legal issues in neonatal-perinatal medicine
5. Principles of Neonatal Care
One: Evaluating and improving the quality of neonatal care
Two. Practicing evidence-based neonatal-perinatal medicine
6. Neonatology in developing countries
II. THE FETUS
7. Genetic aspects of perinatal disease and prenatal diagnosis
8. Perinatal ultrasound
9. Estimation of Fetal Well-Being
One: Evaluation of the antepartum fetus
Two: Evaluation of the intrapartum fetus
10. Pharmacologic Intervention
One: Developmental pharmacology
Two: Pharmacologic treatment of the fetus
11. Surgical treatment of the fetus
12. Occupational and environmental risks to the fetus
III. PREGNANCY DISORDERS AND THEIR INPACT ON THE FETUS
13. Intrauterine growth restriction
14. Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy
15. Pregnancy complicated by diabetes mellitus
16. Obstetric management of prematurity
17. Fetal effects of autoimmune disease
18. Obstetric management of multiple gestation
19. Postterm pregnancy
20. Erythroblastosis fetalis
21. Amniotic fluid and non-immune hydrops fetalis
22. Perinatal infections
23. Placental pathology
IV. THE DELIVERY ROOM
24. Anaesthesia for labor and delivery
25. Neonatal Resuscitation: An Evidence-Based Approach
One: Overview and initial management
Two: Role of positive pressure ventilation in neonatal resuscitation
Three: Oxygen therapy
Four: Chest Compressions, medications, and special problems
26. Physical examination and basic care of the newborn
27. Birth injuries
28. Congenital anomalies
V. PROVISIONS FOR NEONATAL CARE
29. Physical Environment
One: The thermal environment
Two: Environmental influences of the developing neonate
30. Biomedical engineering aspects of neonatal monitoring
31. Anesthesia in the neonate
32. Care of the mother, father, and infant
33. Nutrition and Metabolism in the High-Risk Neonate
One: Enteral feeding
Two: Parenteral Nutrition
34. Fluids, Electrolytes, and Acid-Base Homeostasis
35. Diagnostic imaging
36. Infants of addicted mothers
VI. DEVELOPMENT AND DISORDERS OF ORGAN SYSTEMS
37. The Immune System
One: Developmental immunology
Two: Postnatal bacterial infections
Three: Fungal and protozoal infections
Four: Viral infections
38. The Central Nervous System
One: Normal and abnormal brain development
Two: White matter injury
Three: Intracranial hemorrhage and vascular lesions
Four: Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy
1. Pathophysiology
2. Assessment tools
3. Management
Five: Seizures in neonates
Six: Hypotonia and neuromuscular disease
Seven: Disorders in head size and shape
39. Follow-up for high-risk neonates
40. Hearing loss in the newborn infant
41. Neurobehavioral development of the preterm infant
42. The respiratory system
One: Lung development and maturation
Two: Assessment of pulmonary function
Three: Respiratory distress syndrome and its management
Four: Assisted ventilation and complications of respiratory distress
Five: Repiratory disorders in preterm and term infants
Six: Upper airway lesions
Seven: Neonatal chronic lung disease
Eight: Cardiorespiratory failure, adjuvant therapies, ECMO, and inhaled NO
43. The cardiovascular system
One: Cardiac embryology
Two: Causes and associations
Three: Fetal cardiac physiology and fetal cardiovascular assessment
Four: Principles of neonatal cardiovascular hemodynamics
Five: Approach to the neonate with cardiovascular disease
Six: Congenital defects
Seven: Cardiovascular problems of the neonate
Eight: Neonatal arrhythmias
Nine: Principles of medical and surgical management, including interventional catheterization
44. The blood and hematopoietic system
One: Hematologic problems in the fetus and neonate
Two: Blood component therapy for the neonate
45. The gastrointestinal tract
One: Development
Two: Upper gastrointestinal disorders
Three: Disorders of digestion
Four: Selected anomalies and intestinal obstruction
Five: Necrotizing enterocolitis
46. Neonatal jaundice and liver disease
47. Metabolic and endocrine disorders
One: Disorders of carbohydrate metabolism
Two: Disorders of calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium metabolism
Three: Thyroid disorders
Four: Abnormalities of sexual differentiation
48. Inborn errors of metabolism
49. Kidney and urinary tract
50. The skin
51. The eye
One: Diagnosis and evaluation
Two: Neonatal eye disease
Three: Retinopathy of prematurity
52. Neonatal orthopedics
One: Musculoskeletal disorders
Two: Bone and joint infections
Three: Congenital abnormalities of the upper and lower extremities and spine
Appendices
A. Therapeutic Agents
B. Tables of Normal Values
C. Schedule for Immunization of Preterm Infants
Synopsis
Fanaroff and Martin¡¯s Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine covers everything you need to improve the quality of life and long-term outcomes of your patients. Drs. Richard J. Martin, Avroy A. Fanaroff, and Michele C. Walsh, along with a multi-disciplinary team of contributors guide you through the sweeping developments in diagnosis and treatment of the mother fetus, and neonate. The completely updated 9th edition keeps you current on the late preterm infant, the fetal origins of adult disease, neonatal anemia, genetic disorders, and more¡¦in print and online.
• Get comprehensive guidance on treating patients through a dual focus on neonatology and perinatology.
• See nuances and details in over 800 illustrations that depict disorders in the clinical setting and explain complex information.
• Find the information you need easily with indexing in both volumes that provides quick access to specific guidance.
• Access the fully searchable contents of the book online at expertconsult.com, along with a downloadable image library.
• Spot genetic problems early and advise parents of concerns thanks to completely new section on this topic.
• Tackle the health problems associated with preterm births through a new chapter on The Late Preterm Infant.
• Understand the fetal origins of adult disease through a new chapter that focuses on conditions that originate in the womb.
• Stay current on the developments and research surrounding neonatal anemia from the entirely new chapter on Blood and Hematopoietic System highlights.
• Obtain more global perspectives and best practices from an increased number of international contributions in this edition.
Advance clinically with advice based on the best-available evidence covering the wide spectrum of both perinatology and neonatology