Ronella Marom
Tel Aviv University
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Featured researches published by Ronella Marom.
The Journal of Pediatrics | 2014
Anat Yerushalmy-Feler; Ronella Marom; Tali Peylan; Akiva Korn; Alon Haham; Dror Mandel; Inbal Yarkoni; Haim Bassan
OBJECTIVE To determine the impact of fetal growth on postnatal amplitude-integrated electroencephalography (aEEG) and power spectrum electroencephalography (EEG) data in preterm infants born with intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). STUDY DESIGN We defined IUGR as birth weight <10th percentile, and control as birth weight appropriate for gestational age (GA). We performed single-channel (C3-C4) EEG during the first 48 hours of life and measured the upper and lower margins of the aEEG trace width. EEG readings were analyzed by spectral analysis, and the relative power of the frequency bands was calculated. The Lacey Assessment of the Preterm Infant was administered before discharge. RESULTS We enrolled 14 infants with IUGR (mean GA, 34.3 ± 1.8 weeks; mean birth weight 1486 ± 304 g) and 16 appropriate for GA controls (mean GA, 33.7 ± 2 weeks; mean birth weight, 1978 ± 488 g). There were no significant between-group differences in perinatal complications. The mean aEEG trace width was 20.8 ± 1.4 μv in the infants with IUGR versus 17.3 ± 1.6 μv in controls (P < .001). The infants with IUGR also had significantly greater delta frequency activity and decreased theta, alpha, and beta frequency activities compared with controls. Delta frequency activity decreased with increasing GA (r = -0.8; P = .001 for infants with IUGR and r = -0.9; P < .001 for controls). The Lacey Assessment of the Preterm Infant developmental score was significantly lower in the infants with IUGR (P < .02) and was correlated with aEEG trace width (r = -0.6; P = .002) and with delta activity (r = -0.5; P = .02). CONCLUSION Preterm infants with IUGR have delayed EEG maturation associated with delayed neuromotor development. The predictive value of these alterations regarding developmental deficits associated with IUGR remains undetermined, however.
Journal of Perinatology | 2014
H M Lev; A Ovental; Dror Mandel; Francis B. Mimouni; Ronella Marom; R Lubetzky
Objective:Long-term storage of human milk (HM) requires freezing at low temperatures, the consequences of which upon macronutrients are unclear. To test the null hypothesis that HM freezing and storage for a range of 1 to 10 weeks at −80 °C does not affect HM fat, protein, lactose and energy contents.Study design:Samples of HM were obtained from 20 mothers (60 samples) of preterm infants (25 to 35 weeks gestation), who routinely expressed their milk, every 3 h, using an electric pump, from the second to the seventh week after delivery. All samples were frozen at −80 °C for 8 to 83 days (43.8 days average). After thawing and homogenization, energy and macronutrient contents were measured using an HM analyzer.Result:Fat, carbohydrates and energy contents were significantly lower in thawed HM than in fresh HM (fat, fresh vs thawed: 3.72±1.17 vs 3.36±1.19 g/100 ml, P<0.001; carbohydrates, fresh vs thawed: 5.86±0.71 vs 4.09±0.96 g/100 ml, P<0.001; energy, fresh vs thawed: 64.93±12.97 vs 56.63±16.82 kcal/100 ml, P<0.0001), whereas protein content remained unchanged (protein, fresh vs thawed: 1.14±0.36 vs 1.15±0.37 g/100 ml, P=0.7). The decline in carbohydrates content but not in fat and energy correlated significantly with freezing duration.Conclusion:Freezing at −80 °C significantly decreases the energy content of HM, both from fat and carbohydrates. Since quantitatively the decrease in macronutrients was much higher than that published for HM storage at −20 °C, our results do not support freezing HM at −80 °C as the gold standard for long-term storage. We suggest that caloric intake calculations in preterm infants cannot be established based upon fresh HM data.
Breastfeeding Medicine | 2013
Moran Hausman Kedem; Dror Mandel; Keren Armoni Domani; Francis B. Mimouni; Vered Shay; Ronella Marom; Shaul Dollberg; Lea Herman; Ronit Lubetzky
BACKGROUND Little is known about the effect of maternal age on human milk (HM) composition. This study was designed to study fat content, estimated by creamatocrit (CMT), in HM collected in the first 2 weeks of life in older (≥ 35 years) compared with younger (<35 years) mothers. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS Ninety lactating mothers (48 older, 42 younger) of newborns were recruited within the first 3 days of delivery. CMTs were measured at 72 hours, 7 days, and 14 days after delivery for HM in a capillary tube after centrifugation at 5,366 g for 5 minutes. RESULTS The groups did not differ in terms of maternal height and diet, infant birth weight, gestational age (GA), or pregnancy weight gain. They differed significantly in terms of maternal age and parity. Mean colostrum CMT was significantly higher in the group of older mothers. Colostrum CMT correlated positively with maternal age (R(2)=0.11, p=0.006) and inversely with GA (R(2)=0.1, p=0.03) but did not relate with either maternal weight or body mass index. CMT at age 7 days and 2 weeks was not affected by maternal age or GA. In multivariate regression analysis colostrum CMT correlated significantly only with maternal age and GA (R(2)=0.3, p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS Colostrum fat content of older mothers is much higher than that of younger mothers and inversely related with GA at delivery. This increase in colostrum fat content obtained from mothers with advanced age may be due to increased fat synthesis and excretion in milk, reduced water content of milk, or a combination of both.
Acta Paediatrica | 2010
Ronella Marom; Shaul Dollberg; Francis B. Mimouni; Irit Berger; Nina Mordechayev; Yifat Ochshorn; Dror Mandel
Background: Little is known about the glucose concentrations at and after birth of infants delivered by caesarean section (CS), when compared with infants born vaginally (VD).
Archives of Disease in Childhood-fetal and Neonatal Edition | 2000
Shaul Dollberg; Ronella Marom; Francis B. Mimouni; Mark Yeruchimovich
Thirty one term large for gestational age (LGA) infants of non-diabetic mothers were compared with 30 appropriate for gestational age controls. Median absolute nucleated red blood cell counts, lymphocyte counts, and packed cell volumes were significantly higher in the LGA infants than the controls. It is possible that LGA babies of non-diabetic mothers are exposed to relative intrauterine hypoxia.
American Journal of Perinatology | 2013
Shira Benor; Ronella Marom; Amir Ben Tov; Keren Armoni Domany; Galit Zaidenberg-Israeli; Shaul Dollberg
OBJECTIVE Oral probiotic supplementation reduces the risk of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) in preterm infants. Concerns about safety and purity of probiotic preparations have limited their use in preterm infants. The authors administered probiotic bacteria to mothers of preterm infants, thereby avoiding the risks of direct exposure of infants to probiotic bacteria. DESIGN This prospective, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled trial at the Tel Aviv Medical Center (June 2007-November 2009) examined the effects of maternal oral probiotic supplementation on the incidence of NEC, death, and sepsis in very low birth weight (VLBW) infants fed with maternal breast milk. Mothers were assigned to supplementation with Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacteria lactis 2 × 10(E) [DOSAGE ERROR CORRECTED] CFU/d or to placebo starting from 1 to 3 days postpartum. The primary outcome measures were NEC, sepsis, and death. RESULTS In total 49 mothers of 58 VLBW infants were recruited. A total of 25 infants were in the probiotic group and 33 in the placebo group. The overall incidence of Bell stage II to III NEC was 12%, with an incidence of 4% in the infants of the probiotic group and 18.2% in the placebo group (p = 0.12), respectively. Sepsis and mortality rates were similar. CONCLUSION Postpartum maternal supplementation with probiotic bacteria may decrease the incidence of NEC in breastfed infants.
Acta Paediatrica | 2014
A Ovental; Ronella Marom; Eyal Botzer; N Batscha; Shaul Dollberg
The US Food and Drug Administration has said that oral preparations containing benzocaine should only be used in infants under strict medical supervision, due to the rare, but potentially fatal, risk of methemoglobinemia. This study aimed to determine the analgesic effect of topical application of benzocaine prior to lingual frenotomy in infants with symptomatic tongue‐tie. We hypothesised that the duration of crying immediately following frenotomy with topical benzocaine would be shorter than with no benzocaine.
Neuropsychologia | 2014
Maya Weinstein; Ronella Marom; Irit Berger; Dafna Ben Bashat; Varda Gross-Tsur; Liat Ben-Sira; Moran Artzi; Shimrit Uliel; Yael Leitner; Ronny Geva
The neonatal period is considered to be essential for neurodevelopment and wellbeing throughout the life span, yet little is known about brain-behavior relationships in the neonatal period. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association between neonatal sensory-motor regulation and white-matter (WM) integrity of major fiber tracts in the neonatal period. We hypothesized that WM integrity of sensory-motor systems would predict neurobehavioral maturation during the first month of life. Forty-nine premature neonates underwent magnetic-resonance-imaging at term. Diffusion-tensor-imaging analysis was performed in major WM tracts along with repeated neonatal neurobehavioral evaluations assessing sensory reactivity and motor regulation. Difficulties in one or more behavioral sub-category, mostly in auditory and visual attention, hypotonicity and jitteriness, were documented in 78.3% infants at term. Sixty-six percent of infants experienced difficulties, mostly in auditory attention, head-neck control, hypotonicity and motor asymmetry, at 44 weeks. Attention difficulties were associated with reduced integrity of cerebral and superior cerebellar peduncles; while tonicity was associated with reduced integrity of the corpus-callosum and inferior-posterior tracts. Overall, results showed that early maturing tracts were related with the degree of typicality of sensory reactivity status while late maturing tracts were related with the degree of typicality of tonic regulation. WM integrity and maturation factors explained 40.2% of the variance in neurobehavior at 44 weeks. This study suggests that in preterm neonates, deviant sensory-motor reactivity can be detected very early in development in manners that are related to lower integrity/maturational level of early and late maturing fiber tracts.
Acta Paediatrica | 2012
Ronella Marom; Tamar Shedlisker-Kening; Francis B. Mimouni; Ronit Lubetzky; Shaul Dollberg; Irit Berger; Dror Mandel
Aim: To test the hypothesis that olfactory stimulation in growing healthy preterm infants leads to an increase in resting energy expenditure (REE).
Journal of Child Neurology | 2011
Moran Artzi; Liat Ben Sira; Haim Bassan; Varda Gross-Tsur; Irit Berger; Ronella Marom; Yael Leitner; Yoram Bental; Yakov Shiff; Ronny Geva; Maya Weinstein; Dafna Ben Bashat
Hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy is an important cause of neuropsychological deficits. Little is known about brain diffusivity in these infants following cooling and its potential in predicting outcome. Diffusion tensor imaging was applied to 3 groups: (1) three infants with hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy: cooled; (2) three infants with hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy: noncooled; and (3) four controls. Diffusivity values at the corticospinal tract, thalamus, and putamen were correlated with Apgar scores and early neurodevelopmental outcome. While cooled infants exhibited lower Apgar scores than noncooled infants, their developmental scores at a mean age of 8 months were higher. All groups differed in their diffusivity values with the cooled infants showing better values compared with the noncooled, correlating with early neurodevelopmental outcome. These preliminary results indicate that diffusion tensor imaging performed at an early age in infants with hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy may forecast clinical outcome and support the neuroprotective effect of hypothermia treatment.