My DS was born at 36 wks and weighted 1.6kg, so not as early as your bub but his lungs were healthy at birth and 4.5 years on he hasnt had any issues with them at all.
DD was born at 33 weeks she was a massive 2350grams (which was average for that gestation)
At birth she was diagnosed with mild lung disease, but required no assistance breathing, just oxygen, which i thought would be pretty common for that gestation.
In the last 3 weeks she has had two nasty cases of Coup, the first requiring a trip to A & E and the second the locum came out.
We have been advised that she is likely to be susceptible especially with two doses so closely. She didn't however recieve the steroids prior to birth (I progressed too quickly after PPROM).
Did your DD recieve the steroids prior to delivery? I don't know whether that would make an impact on her now or not, we are just going to have to wait and see I guess....?
We now have steroids in the fridge JIC but hoping we don't need it.
I had a huge amoutn of Oxygen therapy which apparently is the main cause of my loss of eyesight now. It's not too major but I am a full time (strong) glasses wearer and it will keep getting worse as I get older. Apparently poor eyesight is very common in prem babies later in life.
Also had a midwife say to me a few weeks back that a recent study showed that female prem babies who have steroids for their lungs (which I did not) and lots of oxygen therapy nearly always develop high blood pressure during pregnancy but are fine otherwise.
Brendan hasnt been diagnosed with any health issues. He had many after his birth at 30 weeks, including Hyaline Membrane Disease which required ventilation and CPAP. I was able to receive the full dose of steroids prior to birth (PPROM at 28 weeks)
Since his birth we've had no hospital re-admissions for sicknesses *touch wood*
We are still doing eye checks, his next one is in oct.
The biggest thing for us is developmental delays, but they are minor compared to the health issues he could have.
My brother was born at 33 weeks - had a hole in his heart (apparently common that early) but it closed up on its own and he's been healthy as a horse ever since... he's 8 in August. The only thing we have ever been able to attribute to his being prem was a slowness to ride his bicycle without training wheels - apparently being prem can cause very minor learning-to-balance setbacks. But that wasn't even a definite link - I'm sure there are kids out there that aren't prem that take longer to learn the balancing that bike-riding requires.
I think it is a very individual thing? No way of knowing if your child will develop health issues later on, but statistically I believe it is more likely for prem babies.
My neice and nephew (twins) were born at 30 weeks. They have asthma, but so do all their siblings (including their sisters who are another set of twins born at 36 weeks and one other sister) and more importantly, so do their parents. I would think family history is a big factor here too.
My neice (the 30-weeker) has severe immune deficiency, but as far as I'm aware this isn't attributed to her early birth.
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