Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess the usefulness of the white cell ratio of immature neutrophils (PMNs) to total (immature plus mature) PMNs as an indication of infection in the very small premature infant. We retrospectively reviewed the charts of 59 premature infants ≤ 1,250 g admitted to our Newborn Intensive Care Unit over a one-year period who had at least one white count determined. Twenty-three were born after rupture of membranes for ≥ 24 hours (PROM), 47 had a one-minute Apgar score ≤ 6 and 31 had a five-minute Apgar scores ≤ 6, 38 had respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), and 4 had con firmed infection. Thirty-one of the infants had a ratio ≥ .15 in the first day of life, a value which has been suggested in the literature as being abnormal and an indication to suspect sepsis. This ratio bore no statistical relationship to PROM, low Apgar scores, or RDS. We analyzed these same relationships using a ratio ≥.25, another ratio derived from data in the literature which has been said to suggest infection. No statistical correlation was found for low Apgars or RDS, but there was a significant relationship between PROM and attainment of a ratio ≥.25 (p < .005). It is notable that 2 out of the 4 infants with infection had a ratio <.15. We wish to cast doubt on the applicability of the currently defined WBC ratios in the literature as they apply to the infant with birth weight < 1,250 g and emphasize the apparent effect of PROM as a factor upon these ratios.
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