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Necrotizing enterocolitis

Necrotizing enterocolitis
Necrotizing enterocolitis
Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a devastating disease of infancy and the most common serious acquired gastrointestinal disease in the newborn infant. The term necrotizing enterocolitis was first coined in the 1950s when used to describe infants who died with necrotic lesions of the gastrointestinal tract, but it did not become recognized as a distinct clinical entity until the 1960s, when a number of authors began reporting their experience with this disease. With improvements in neonatal intensive care over the past four decades, the incidence of NEC is increasing as more babies born at the extreme limits of prematurity now survive. Recent estimates place the incidence at approximately 0.5 percent of all live births and at between 3 and 5 percent of low-birthweight infants born prematurely. Concurrent with this increase in incidence has been an extensive amount of time and energy devoted to exploring the etiology and pathogenesis of this disease by a number of individuals and groups worldwide. Despite these efforts, our understanding of the processes contributing to the development of NEC remains limited.
CRC Press
Hall, Nigel
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Pierro, Agostino
74bd6b37-4305-47fd-847d-c19a08718997
Spitz, Lewis
Davenport, Mark
Coran, Arnold
Hall, Nigel
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Pierro, Agostino
74bd6b37-4305-47fd-847d-c19a08718997
Spitz, Lewis
Davenport, Mark
Coran, Arnold

Hall, Nigel and Pierro, Agostino (2006) Necrotizing enterocolitis. In, Spitz, Lewis, Davenport, Mark and Coran, Arnold (eds.) Operative Pediatric Surgery. 6 ed. CRC Press.

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a devastating disease of infancy and the most common serious acquired gastrointestinal disease in the newborn infant. The term necrotizing enterocolitis was first coined in the 1950s when used to describe infants who died with necrotic lesions of the gastrointestinal tract, but it did not become recognized as a distinct clinical entity until the 1960s, when a number of authors began reporting their experience with this disease. With improvements in neonatal intensive care over the past four decades, the incidence of NEC is increasing as more babies born at the extreme limits of prematurity now survive. Recent estimates place the incidence at approximately 0.5 percent of all live births and at between 3 and 5 percent of low-birthweight infants born prematurely. Concurrent with this increase in incidence has been an extensive amount of time and energy devoted to exploring the etiology and pathogenesis of this disease by a number of individuals and groups worldwide. Despite these efforts, our understanding of the processes contributing to the development of NEC remains limited.

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Published date: 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477840
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477840
PURE UUID: 6dd2d088-fd2d-4118-828a-9965ada9cfb2
ORCID for Nigel Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8570-9374

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Date deposited: 15 Jun 2023 16:49
Last modified: 12 Mar 2024 02:48

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Contributors

Author: Nigel Hall ORCID iD
Author: Agostino Pierro
Editor: Lewis Spitz
Editor: Mark Davenport
Editor: Arnold Coran

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