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Volume 1, Issue 1

J Nurs Res Pract

Nursing Care & Breast Congress 2017

December 11-13, 2017

December 11-13, 2017 | Rome, Italy

Joint Event

&

45

th

WORLD CONGRESS ON NURSING CARE

8

TH

EUROPEAN BREAST CONGRESS

The role of a nurse in preparing parents for care of myelomeningocele child

Renata Bakalarz

1,2

, Alicja Diak

1

, Mateusz Gaczoł

2

, Monika Rogóż

1

, Sylwia Lisowska

1,2

and

Mirosław Bik Multanowski

1

1

Jagiellonian University, Poland

2

Stefan Żeromski Specialist Hospital, Poland

Statement of the Problem:

Congenital malformations of the neural tube result in death or significant disability of the affected

child. One of the most serious defects is myelomeningocoele. This is complex, multi-segmental malformation involving

spinal cord and spine, the consequence of that is impaired conduction of nerve stimuli. The child does not feel touch, pain

nor the warmth in body parts which are connected to the distorted regions of the spinal cord, because the neural pathways are

interrupted or undeveloped.

Aim:

The aim of the study was to show how many challenges and problems await the family in which a child with

myelomeningocoele is born.

Material &Methods:

In the retrospective study conducted in Southern Poland, based on the register of congenital defects, the

prevalence of neural tube defects was 0.92-0.94/1000 births. The analysis included all cases of anencephaly, encephalocoele,

myelomeningocoele and meningocele. Next the problems with baby care and nursing a child with neural tube defects were

analysed, based on interviews with parents of ill children.

Results &Conclusions:

In the analysed group there were 72 cases of lumbosacral defect and 36 cases of thoracolumbar defect.

Hydrocephalus was found in 75% of patients with lumbosacral and in 97% of patients with thoracolumbar malformation.

Patients with hydrocephalus were more likely to have intellectual disability. A significant problem is the lack of control over

urination, which often leads to urinary tract infections. Proper care and rehabilitation methods will stimulate intellectual

development, improve the child's mobility and prevent urinary tract infections.

Biography

Renata Bakalarz is a Specialist in Neonatal Nursing. She is currently in third year of PhD studies at the Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum Faculty of Health

Sciences. She works in the Neonatal Pathology Department in the Stefan Żeromski Specialist Hospital in Krakow.

rgaczol@interia.pl

Renata Bakalarz et al., J Nurs Res Pract 2017, 1:1(Suppl)