The antenatal use of ambroxol (bromhexine metabolite VIII) to prevent hyaline membrane disease: a controlled double-blind study.

1982 
A prospective double-blind clinical trial was carried out to determine whether ambroxol (bromhexine metabolite VIII) treatment (1000 mg/day for a period of 5 days) reduces the risk of hyaline membrane disease (HMD) in potentially premature infants. Amniocentesis was performed before the first and 24 h after the last application of ambroxol or placebo to assess the development of the total phospholipid phosphorus content, the L/S ratio, the P/S ratio, and the properties of the surface tension of the amniotic fluid after ambroxol or placebo. There were 246 infants born to 224 mothers. Of the 116 infants with less than or equal to 36 completed weeks' gestation, 56 were in the ambroxol and 60 in the placebo group. No differences between groups occurred in risk factors for HMD (diabetes, asphyxia, male sex, cesarean section). Statistically significant differences in favor of the infants in the ambroxol group were found in the HMD incidence: 23.2% in the ambroxol group compared with 41.7% in the placebo group (p less than 0.05). There was no reduction of the HMD incidence in the less than or equal to 32-week gestational age category in the ambroxol group compared with the placebo group inspite of the fact that all the examined parameters for determining lung maturity reflected a stimulatory effect of ambroxol compared with the results of the placebo group, particularly before the 33rd week of gestation. Prolonged rupture of the membranes played no protective role against HMD.
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