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ISSN: 2632-251X | Volume 3

Nursing Practice 2019 & Neonatology 2019

December 09-10, 2019

Page 14

Nursing and Nursing Practice Neonatology and Perinatology

December 09-10, 2019 | Barcelona, Spain

7

th

Global Experts Meeting on

4

th

World Congress on

Journal of Nursing Research and Practice

J Nurs Res Pract, Volume 3

Brankica Vasiljevic

NMC Royal Hospital, UAE

Nutrition support very preterm Infants in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

V

ery preterm infants have higher nutrient requirements than term infants. The foetus multiplies in weight five times from 24

weeks gestation to term (a period less than four months); in comparison term infants double their birth weight by four to

five months, Nutrition support preterm infants in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) is complex. Optimizing nutrition early

in life is essential to improve survival and promote growth and development.

Extrauterine growth restriction is common in very preterm infants. Malnutrition at a vulnerable period of brain development is

related to a decreased number of brain cells as well as deficits in behavior, learning, and memory.

Early aggressive nutrition, including parenteral and enteral, iswell tolerated in the very preterminfant and is effective in improving

growth. A strategy of early parenteral nutrition, followed by combined parenteral and enteral nutrition, then phasing to complete

enteral nutrition is currently common practice, Parenteral nutrition is necessary to meet nutritional requirements while enteral

feeds are established. The rapid advancement of enteral feeding should contribute to development of necrotizing enterocolitis.

Continued provision of appropriate nutrition (fortified or human milk or premature formula) is important throughout the growing

care during the hospitalization. After discharge exclusively breastfed infants require additional supplementation

.

Biography

Brankica Vasiljevic is Head of Maternity and Child Health Services in NMC Royal Hospital DIP in Dubai, UAE. After completed her MD she

had completed her clinical postgraduate education (Pediatric and after that Neonatology fellowship) and academic postgraduate education

(MSc in pediatric and ultrasonography field and PhD in neonatology field) at Belgrade University School of Medicine in Serbia. She has

completed also Yugoslav School of Ultrasound and different courses in ultrasonography and echocardiography in Serbia and UK, She also

finished Post Graduate SQIL Program in Harvard Medical School, Boston USA and Post Graduate Program in Pediatric Nutrition at Boston

University School of Medicine USA and Visiting scholar and Internships in Greece (Alexandar Hospital, Iaso Hospital and Elena Hospital in

Athens), USA (Morgan Children’s Hospital- Columbia University New York) and Austria (General Hospital of Salzburg and Regional Hospital

(LKHLandeskrankenhaus) in Graz). She had won the ESPNIC Educational Grant at 5th World Congress on Pediatric Intensive & Critical

Care in Geneva Switzerland (2007). She was a local coordinator for International Neonatal Immunotherapy Study-INIS for Serbia and Mon-

tenegro and participated in SIOP 93-01 Study, ITP Study and Twin Birth Study. She has published more than 35 international publications in

international indexed journals (more than 100 citations), 5 chapters in various fields of neonatal medicine and have more than 30 presenta-

tions in international conferences.

brankica.vasiljevic1@gmail.com