Your Baby’s Caregivers
-
Cardiologist – A doctor who specializes in taking care of heart
problems.
- Neonatal Nurse – A registered nurse who specializes in the
care of sick babies in the NICU.
- Neonatologist – A pediatrician who specializes in the care of sick
newborns.
- Neonatal Nurse Practitioner – A nurse who has received a Masters
degree in Nursing and has specialized training in the care of the
neonate. He/she assists the neonatologist with procedures, patient
teaching, daily patient rounds, etc.
- Radiology Technician – A healthcare team member who takes X-rays of
your baby. This may be done in the NICU or the radiology department.
- Respiratory Therapist – A registered therapist who specializes in
evaluating your baby’s respiratory status and needs.
How We Learn About Your Baby
- Apgar Score – A measurement on a scale of 0-10 of your baby’s condition
at one and five minutes after birth.
- Due Date (EDC) – The estimated time your baby was due to be born at
full term or 40 weeks gestation.
- Full Term Baby – 37 to 42 weeks gestation
- Grams vs. Pounds – Units of weight, 28 grams = 1 ounce, 454 grams = 1
pound. For your convenience, click here to view a weight conversion
chart.
- Large/Small for dates – A baby whose birth weight is more or less than
the third percentile for that particular gestational age.
- Premature Baby – A baby born before 37 weeks gestation regardless of
weight.
- Vital Signs – Your baby’s heart rate, breathing rate, blood pressure and
body temperature.
Where Your Baby Will Be Staying
- Incubator (isolette) - A transport, box-like enclosure in which sick or
preterm babies are placed. Allows control of the temperature around the
baby and provides limited protection of the baby from infectious agents.

- Open Crib – A regular hospital crib that your baby will be placed in
when he/she is ready to maintain his/her temperature on his/her own.
When your baby moves to an open crib, he/she is getting close to going
home.
- Pediatric Crib – A specialized crib with high side rails. Babies who
suffer from reflux (see below) need the head of their beds to be
elevated or they need to be placed on a reflux wedge (see below). With a
pediatric crib, nurses are able to raise the head of the bed higher than
that of a regular open crib. The pediatric crib is also big enough to
place a reflux wedge in it.
- Radiant Warmer – A bed that helps keep your baby at the right
temperature. It may also be covered with plastic wrap for premature
babies to keep more heat in the infant’s environment.
- Reflux Wedge – A special type of mattress that elevates the baby’s head
of the bed at a much higher level than an open crib. These are used for
babies with severe reflux.
Conditions You May Hear Us Discuss
- Apnea – An absence or prolonged pause in breathing (20 seconds or
longer) typical in premature infants.
- Bradycardia (brady) – A significant slowing of the heart rate below the
baby's normal rate. Generally, for babies, a bradycardia is a heart rate
less than 100 beats per minute.
- BPD (Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia) –A chronic lung disease primarily
affecting premature infants who have been mechanically ventilated;
involves air sac damage, scarring of the lung tissue, and areas of atelectasis.
- Desaturations (Desats) – Short periods of time when the oxygen level in
your body’s system drops below an accepted level. This causes lack of
oxygen to the tissues.
- Jaundice (hyperbilirubinemia) – The buildup of bilirubin in the fatty
tissues that result in a yellow skin color.
- Meconium Aspiration Syndrome (MAS) – This happens when a baby inhales a
mixture of meconium and amniotic fluid either in the uterus or shortly
after delivery. Meconium may block the airway, causing difficulty
breathing and poor gas exchange. This causes inflammation, which may
result in pneumonia.
- PDA (Patent Ductus Arteriosus) – A condition where the ductus arteriosus,
a blood vessel that allows blood to bypass the baby’s lungs before
birth, fails to close after birth.
- Reflux – (Gastroespophageal Reflux) - The backward flow of stomach
contents into the esophagus (food pipe); in babies may trigger apnea
and/or bradycardia.
- Residuals – Food remaining in the stomach from the previous feeding at
the time of the next feeding. Large residuals indicate feeding
intolerance.
- RDS (Respiratory Distress Syndrome) – A condition that affects the lungs
of preterm newborns, making it difficult for them to breath. Caused by a
lack of surfactant. Sometimes called hyaline membrane disease.
- Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) - A disease affecting the retina of a
preterm baby's eye. Involves rapid, irregular growth of blood vessels
that can lead to bleeding and scarring of the retina. Can cause retinal
detachment and blindness if severe. Premature babies will have scheduled
exams of their eyes completed before they are discharged, and if the ROP
is severe enough, laser surgery may need to be completed by a qualified
Opthamologist.
- Sepsis – The presence of harmful microorganisms in the blood and their
effects on the body; a general infection.
- Surfactant - soap like substance (made up mainly of fat) produced by
lung cells. Coats inner surfaces of airways and air sacs in the lungs to
keep those passages open between breaths. Absent or lacking in the
babies born preterm (production begins at about 24 weeks gestation but
is not well developed until 36 weeks).
- TTN (Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn) – A respiratory condition
caused by delay in the body's absorption after birth of the fluid that
fills the fetal lungs.
Tests and Treatments Your Baby May Need
- Antibiotics – A drug that kills bacteria or reduces their growth. Used
to treat infections.
- Barium Swallow – A set of X-rays taken to examine the esophagus,
stomach, and small intestines. During the X-ray procedure, the baby is
required to swallow a liquid form of barium that is detectable by X-ray
imaging. This is sometimes used to determine if a baby is having reflux
problems.
- Blood Gases – A laboratory test preformed on blood taken from an artery,
capillary, or vein to determine levels of oxygen, carbon dioxide and
acid.
- CT Scan – A method of body imaging in which a thin X-ray beam rotates
around the baby.
- Echocardiogram (echo) – An ultrasound of the heart and heart functions.
- Head Ultrasound – A diagnostic imaging technique that makes images of
the brain and is generally done at the bedside.
- Hyperal/TPN – The provision of essential nutrients (proteins, fats,
sugar, vitamins, and minerals) and water through an intravenous line to
replace or supplement a baby's intake by mouth.
- Lipids – A group of substances that include fat, which are organic
compounds made up of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
- Oxygen – A molecule contained in air. Necessary for proper functioning
of body cells. Absorbed into the blood from air breathed into the lungs
(called oxygenation).
- Phototherapy Lights – Light treatment for hyperbilirubinemia. Light
waves breakdown indirect bilirubin so that the baby's system can
eliminate it in urine.
- Surfactant Replacement Therapy - A treatment in which a preterm infant
with expected or confirmed respiratory distress syndrome is given a
natural or artificial substance (called an exogenous surfactant) through
a tube placed in the windpipe to replace the natural surfactant the baby
lacks because of early birth.
- X-ray – Radiant energy of short wavelength that penetrates substances
opaque to light differently according to wavelength
Equipment
- Breathing Tube (ET or Endotracheal Tube) – A tube that passes through
the baby’s mouth and into the trachea (windpipe) to allow oxygen to be
delivered to the lungs. Insertion of the tube is called "intubation",
removal, "extubation."
- Cardiac Monitor - An electron device attached to babies in the NICU to
monitor heart rate and rate of breathing; sounds alarm if either falls
below or exceeds a desirable level.
- Chest Tube - A tube inserted into your baby's chest cavity to drain
excess fluid or air.
- Conventional/Mechanical Ventilation (vent) - A mechanical breathing
machine providing safe and effective ventilations to any baby requiring
assistance. Mechanical ventilation in the neonate is typically
accomplished by the use of a pressure-limited ventilator.
- High Frequency Oscillator (HFO) - A mechanical breathing machine that
provides ventilatory support but in a different way than a conventional
ventilator or vent. The HFO inflates the baby's lungs and holds them
open constantly, while at the same time providing small puffs of air.
- Intravenous Live (IV) - A thin tube inserted into a vein by means of a
needle (the needle is removed after the catheter is in the vein). It
supplies medication, fluids or nutrients directly into the blood stream.
May be placed in the hands, arms, feet, legs, or scalp.
- IV Pump - A large pump with chambers available to deliver continuous IV
therapy and medications.
- Nasal Cannula – A small tube placed in your baby’s nose to give extra
oxygen to your baby.
- Nasal CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure) – Air or an air/oxygen
mixture mechanically pushed into a baby's lungs to keep the air sacs
open after each breath, reducing the effort the baby must make to
breathe; usually delivered through short tubes placed in the nose.
- Nasojejunal Tube (NJ Tube) - A soft. Flexible tube inserted into the
nose, through the stomach, and then into the jejunum (a part of the
small intestines). The tube carries formula and medicines into the
jejunum where it can be quickly absorbed into the body. This is usually
used for babies who have severe reflux.
- Orogastric Tube (OG Tube) - A feeding tube that is placed into your
baby's mouth and is advanced into his/her stomach. This tube may be used
to feed or it may be used to remove air from the stomach. If placed
through the nose, it is called a Nasogastric Tube (NG Tube).
- Oxygen Hood - A clear plastic box or hood placed over a baby's head to
hold supplemental oxygen. Also called an "Oxy-hood."
- PICC Line (Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter) - A special
intravenous catheter that is inserted into a peripheral (limbs) vein and
threaded towards the heart. It is used for long term fluid nutrition.
- Pulse Oxymeter - A device that wraps around the hand or foot of a baby
and uses a light sensor to determine the amount of oxygen bound to the
hemoglobin molecules in the blood. A general indicator of a baby's
oxygenation.
- Scale - A piece of equipment used to weigh babies. It may be free
standing or incorporated into a warmer bed.
- Suction Catheter - A tiny tube used to remove mucus from your baby's
nose, mouth, and windpipe.
- Syringe Pump - A small, single pump used to deliver medications or
feedings.
- Transport Isolette - A mobile isolette specially equipped with oxygen.
It is used in the transport of babies from one location to another (i.e.
transports from one unit to another or from one hospital to another).
- Umbilical Catheter - A tiny catheter inserted into an artery and/or vein
in your baby's umbilical cord so that small amounts of blood can be
drawn for tests without using a needle. The catheter in the artery also
measures blood pressure. The catheter in the vein may be used to give
fluids and medicines.
- Vapotherm - A respiratory device that warms and humidifies high flow
rates of air/oxygen blends for delivery to a patient via nasal cannula.
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