M Pritchard… - … of Australia & New Zealand 6th …, 2011 - espace.library.uq.edu.au ... The effect of full body exposure compared to partial body exposure in preterm infants with physiologicaljaundice. Pritchard, M. and Norton, B. (2002). The effect of full body exposure compared to partial body exposure in preterm infants with physiologicaljaundice. ... Cached
[CITATION] Bilirubin Has Anti-Bacterial Properties Against Gram-Positive Bacteria: A Potential Benefit of Physiological Jaundice?
M Goddard, R Hansen, AM Karcher, MJ Munro… - Gastroenterology, 2011 - Elsevier Related articles
BJ Lauer… - Pediatrics in Review, 2011 - Am Acad Pediatrics ... Causes of Neonatal Hyperbilirubinemia. Nonpathologic. PHYSIOLOGICJAUNDICE. Physiologic jaundice is an unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia that occurs after the first postnatal day and can last up to 1 week. ...Physiologicjaundice occurs in infants for a number of reasons. ...
[PDF] from shams.edu.egIAE Ibrahim - 2011 - med.shams.edu.eg ... (Wong et al., 2007) Indirect hyperbilirubinemia usually reflects a neonatal adaptation to bilirubin metabolism and is termed physiologicjaundice. Other times, it ... (2007): Neonatal Jaundice: Bilirubin Physiology and Clinical Chemistry. NeoReviews; 8 (2): e58- e67. View as HTML
[PDF] from banglajol.infoM Haque - Journal of Medicine, 2011 - banglajol.info ... hyperbilirubinemia and its duration. Hemolytic disorders alone do not raise serum bilirubin concentrations beyond 6 to 8 mg/dL. Physiologicjaundice usually resolves within the first 10 days of life. Serum bilirubin concentrations are ... Related articles - All 2 versions