Interactive Transcript
0:00
Okay, so let's go into classic cases.
0:03
So, uh, preterm, so preterm brain injury.
0:05
So there's a couple classifications
0:08
of preterm birth clinically, so indicated as an iatrogenic.
0:11
So the mom had preeclampsia, right?
0:13
There was, um, you know, rupture of memories or something.
0:16
And basically the, the, the child has to be delivered.
0:18
There's no choice otherwise to keep them, you know,
0:21
in utero would cause more harm.
0:23
And then there are spontaneous ones, right?
0:24
So, um, for whatever reason, genetic
0:26
or some environmental thing, you know, maybe lifestyle
0:29
with smoking, whatever.
0:30
Uh, for whatever reason,
0:32
the preterm birth just starts spontaneously.
0:34
And it's really a cascade of vascular and
0:36
or inflammatory factors that leads to this
0:38
that we're still really trying to understand better.
0:41
Um, and the problem of course, with preterm birth is
0:43
that you have many immature organ systems.
0:45
The neuroglial precursors are all immature.
0:47
Birth is a traumatic event going from in utero to ex utero.
0:50
And so you have these, you know, fryable vessels
0:53
and other things that are being damaged
0:55
with the primary insult,
0:56
and then also secondary and tertiary, right?
0:58
So you're getting ongoing destruction cycle
1:01
and then long-term dis maturation, um, therapy.
1:06
So they have tocolytic to try to slow down delivery.
1:08
And then just things to help decrease inflammation,
1:11
reduce infection, keep the, you know, uh, small,
1:15
small child warm, um, keep them ventilated, right?
1:18
And then the big one for preterm is this kangaroo care,
1:21
which is, you know, what's kangaroo care?
1:23
So it's basically like skin to skin contact
1:25
between the mother and the baby.
1:26
So it helps both of them, right?
1:27
It helps with the bonding, it helps with like microbiome
1:31
and, you know, breast milk and stuff.
1:32
So that the, the, this neonate is getting like the,
1:36
you know, a lot of the kind
1:37
of protective factors from the mother
1:38
that they have lost from,
1:40
from being the preterm birth and so forth.
1:42
So the idea is like, like this tree kangaroo, right?
1:44
Is that basically, you know, if you,
1:46
if you look at a newborn kangaroos this tiny pink hairless
1:48
thing and it has to crawl its way up to the pouch
1:51
and like find the, find the tet.
1:53
So, you know, honestly, like humans have it a lot easier
1:56
'cause we have all this exogenous support,
1:58
but yeah, that's the idea, right?
1:59
So basically it has to sit in there and mature
2:00
and have skin to skin contact.