Extremely Preterm Infants Have a Higher Fat Mass Percentage in Comparison to Very Preterm Infants at Term-Equivalent Age

scientific article published on 10 March 2020

Extremely Preterm Infants Have a Higher Fat Mass Percentage in Comparison to Very Preterm Infants at Term-Equivalent Age is …
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scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.3389/FPED.2020.00061
P932PMC publication ID7078645
P698PubMed publication ID32219084

P2093author name stringNicholas Morris
Sandra Holasek
Christoph Binder
Zahra Khan
Berndt Urlesberger
Marlies Bruckner
Bernadette Windisch
P2860cites workEffect of sex and gestational age on neonatal body compositionQ46109557
Is term newborn body composition being achieved postnatally in preterm infants?Q46204275
Protein requirements in preterm infants: effect of different levels of protein intake on growth and body compositionQ46720528
Early development of visceral fat excess after spontaneous catch-up growth in children with low birth weight.Q46843570
Preterm infant body composition cannot be accurately determined by weight and lengthQ47276180
Growth in the neonatal intensive care unit influences neurodevelopmental and growth outcomes of extremely low birth weight infantsQ47343202
Preliminary evaluation of a new pediatric air displacement plethysmograph for body composition assessment in infantsQ47383510
Can Basic Characteristics Estimate Body Composition in Early Infancy?Q47669661
The relationship of poor linear growth velocity with neonatal illness and two-year neurodevelopment in preterm infantsQ48601675
Growth and body composition of preterm infants less than or equal to 32 weeks: Cohort studyQ49846185
Rapid recovery of fat mass in small for gestational age preterm infants after term.Q33796569
Longitudinal body composition data in exclusively breast-fed infants: a multicenter study.Q33817991
Critical appraisal of the estimation of body composition via two-, three-, and four-compartment modelsQ34354637
Sexual dimorphism in relation to adipose tissue and intrahepatocellular lipid deposition in early infancyQ35317970
Validity of anthropometric equations to estimate infant fat mass at birth and in early infancyQ36324299
Enteral nutrient supply for preterm infants: commentary from the European Society of Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition Committee on Nutrition.Q37625780
Optimising preterm nutrition: present and futureQ38794953
New body composition reference charts for preterm infantsQ38799889
Body composition at birth in preterm infants between 30 and 36 weeks gestationQ39262337
Evaluation of air-displacement plethysmography for body composition assessment in preterm infants.Q39607607
Determinants of body composition in preterm infants at the time of hospital discharge.Q50688744
Body Composition in Very Preterm Infants: Role of Neonatal Characteristics and Nutrition in Achieving Growth Similar to Term Infants.Q51315437
Gender- and gestational age-specific body fat percentage at birth.Q51428319
Fat and fat-free mass at birth: air displacement plethysmography measurements on 350 Ethiopian newborns.Q51436283
Feasibility study: Assessing the influence of macronutrient intakes on preterm body composition, using air displacement plethysmography.Q51640781
Effect of standardized feeding protocol on nutrient supply and postnatal growth of preterm infants: A prospective study.Q52566512
A new air displacement plethysmograph for the measurement of body composition in infants.Q55036374
Validation of a new pediatric air-displacement plethysmograph for assessing body composition in infants.Q55038314
Growth and Fat-Free Mass Gain in Preterm Infants After Discharge: A Randomized Controlled TrialQ57745517
Adiposity in small for gestational age preterm infants assessed at term equivalent ageQ57745605
Distribution of adipose tissue in the newbornQ75185464
Determinants of adiposity during preweaning postnatal growth in appropriately grown and growth-restricted term infantsQ79954577
Altered adiposity after extremely preterm birthQ81178706
1. Guidelines on Paediatric Parenteral Nutrition of the European Society of Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (ESPGHAN) and the European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism (ESPEN), Supported by the European Society ofQ81411977
Feeding preterm infants after hospital discharge: a commentary by the ESPGHAN Committee on NutritionQ83365111
New charts for the assessment of body composition, according to air-displacement plethysmography, at birth and across the first 6 mo of lifeQ91735715
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationalQ20007257
P6216copyright statuscopyrightedQ50423863
P921main subjectpreterm infantQ45051448
P304page(s)61
P577publication date2020-03-10
P1433published inFrontiers in pediatricsQ27725038
P1476titleExtremely Preterm Infants Have a Higher Fat Mass Percentage in Comparison to Very Preterm Infants at Term-Equivalent Age
P478volume8

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Q102054078Do preterm girls need different nutrition to preterm boys? Sex-specific nutrition for the preterm infantcites workP2860