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Archives of Disease in Childhood - Fetal and Neonatal Edition 2004;89:F254-F257; doi:10.1136/adc.2003.026906
Copyright © 2004 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health.
Archives of Disease in Childhood Fetal and Neonatal Edition 2004;89:F254
© 2004 Archives of Disease in Childhood Fetal and Neonatal Edition

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Postnatal weight loss in term infants: what is "normal" and do growth charts allow for it?

C M Wright and K N Parkinson

Department of Child Health, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Dr Wright
PEACH Unit, QMH Tower, Yorkhill Hospitals, Glasgow G3 8SJ, Scotland, UK; charlotte.wright{at}clinmed.gla.ac.uk

Background: Although it is a well known phenomenon, limited normative data on neonatal weight loss and subsequent gain are available, making it hard to assess individual children with prolonged weight loss.

Objective: To establish, using data from a large prospective population based cohort study, norms and limits for postnatal weight loss and its impact on current growth reference charts.

Method: A cohort of 961 term infants were recruited at birth and followed using parental questionnaires and community nursing returns. Routine weights were collected for half the cohort at 5 days and for all at 12 days and 6 weeks.

Results: Less weight loss was seen than the 3–6% suggested by previous studies, but one in five infants had not regained their birth weight by 12 days. Those lightest at birth showed least weight loss. Twenty six (3%) children had more than 10% weight loss, but none showed evidence of major organic disease. Actual weights in the first fortnight are half to one centile space lower than growth charts suggest, while birthweight centiles for children born at 37 weeks were two centile spaces lower.

Conclusions: Neonatal weight loss is brief, with few children remaining more than 10% below birth weight after 5 days. Growth charts are misleading in the first 2 weeks, because they make no allowance for neonatal weight loss.

Keywords: weight gain; growth charts; failure to thrive


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  • Wright, C, Lakshman, R, Emmett, P, Ong, K K (2008). Implications of adopting the WHO 2006 Child Growth Standard in the UK: two prospective cohort studies. Arch. Dis. Child. 93: 566-569 [Abstract] [Full Text]  
  • Sloan, N. L., Ahmed, S., Mitra, S. N., Choudhury, N., Chowdhury, M., Rob, U., Winikoff, B. (2008). Community-Based Kangaroo Mother Care to Prevent Neonatal and Infant Mortality: A Randomized, Controlled Cluster Trial. Pediatrics 121: e1047-e1059 [Abstract] [Full Text]  
  • Connor, K, Lennon, R, McGraw, M E, Coward, R J M (2008). A fair reason for failing to thrive. EDUCATION AND PRACTICE 93: 50-57 [Full Text]  
  • Martens, P. J., Romphf, L. (2007). Factors Associated With Newborn In-Hospital Weight Loss: Comparisons by Feeding Method, Demographics, and Birthing Procedures. J Hum Lact 23: 233-241 [Abstract]  
  • Wright, C M, Parkinson, K N, Drewett, R F (2006). The influence of maternal socioeconomic and emotional factors on infant weight gain and weight faltering (failure to thrive): data from a prospective birth cohort. Arch. Dis. Child. 91: 312-317 [Abstract] [Full Text]  
  • Wright, C. M (2005). Growth charts for babies. BMJ 330: 1399-1400 [Full Text]  

eLetters:

Read all eLetters

Improving the neonatal weight chart
T J Cole
Fetal Neonatal Ed. Online, 30 Jun 2004 [Full text]
Postnatal weight loss in term infants: to correct for birthweight or not.
Peter D Macdonald
Fetal Neonatal Ed. Online, 22 Aug 2005 [Full text]
Postnatal weight loss in term infants: what is "normal" and do growth charts allow for it?
Peter D Macdonald
Fetal Neonatal Ed. Online, 25 Aug 2005 [Full text]

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