Literature DB >> 10863652

Adaptive mechanisms of developing brain. The neuroradiologic assessment of the preterm infant.

L R Ment1, K C Schneider, M A Ainley, W C Allan.   

Abstract

Since the 1980s, cranial sonography has been routinely performed in premature infants. This has produced a wealth of information about the more dramatic central nervous system lesions of IVH, PVL, and late VM. This information has included timing and evolution of these lesions and their eventual correlation with outcome. For two reasons the advent of MR imaging scanning has produced an interest in using this modality to evaluate these same infants. First, MR imaging gives an obviously superior image, and its ability to detect lesions is far superior to that of ultrasound. Second, the ability of cranial sonography to detect all of the children with CP or low IQ is limited. In our studies of outcome in very low-birth weight infants grade 3 to 4 IVH, PVL, or VM are able to detect only about 50% of the infants who developed CP by 3 years. This condition should be highly correlated with structural brain disease; an imaging modality that was more sensitive to central nervous system lesions should offer an advantage in predicting outcome. In the only prospective assessment of the ability of these two modalities to predict outcome at 3 years, van de Bor and colleagues found MR imaging did not do better than cranial sonography. This was largely because both modalities detected the most severe lesions, and most children with milder lesions on MR imaging had normal outcome. Studies of late (age 1 to teenage years) MR imaging scans in preterm infants show that a high percentage have white matter lesions but these lesions correlate poorly with outcome. If our concern when counseling parents is to alert them when a serious adverse outcome is likely in their child, then cranial sonography is to be favored precisely because it is less able to detect subtle lesions, which the developing brain has the capacity to overcome. On the other hand, if our aim is to detect all lesions, even though these lesions do not predict serious adverse outcomes, then MR imaging is to be favored. Research aimed at discovering etiologies and mechanisms of brain injury in these high-risk infants should use the more sensitive modality MR imaging. Finally, the interesting observation that preterm infants fare as well as they do despite MR imaging-identified lesions might stimulate research studying the adaptive mechanisms of developing brain.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10863652     DOI: 10.1016/s0095-5108(05)70023-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Perinatol        ISSN: 0095-5108            Impact factor:   3.430


  7 in total

1.  Predictability of cerebral palsy and its characteristics through neonatal cranial ultrasound in a high-risk NICU population.

Authors:  Eveline Himpens; Ann Oostra; Inge Franki; Georges Van Maele; Piet Vanhaesebrouck; Christine Van den Broeck
Journal:  Eur J Pediatr       Date:  2010-05-16       Impact factor: 3.183

Review 2.  Ultrasound imaging of preterm brain injury: fundamentals and updates.

Authors:  Misun Hwang; Luis O Tierradentro-García; Syed H Hussaini; Stephanie C Cajigas-Loyola; Summer L Kaplan; Hansel J Otero; Richard D Bellah
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2021-10-14

Review 3.  European recommendations on practices in pediatric neuroradiology: consensus document from the European Society of Neuroradiology (ESNR), European Society of Paediatric Radiology (ESPR) and European Union of Medical Specialists Division of Neuroradiology (UEMS).

Authors:  Andrea Rossi; Maria Argyropoulou; Dora Zlatareva; Gregoire Boulouis; Francesca B Pizzini; Luc van den Hauwe; Maria Raissaki; Jean-Pierre Pruvo; Karen Rosendahl; Chen Hoffmann; Pia C Sundgren
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2022-09-05

4.  Oligodendrocyte regeneration after neonatal hypoxia requires FoxO1-mediated p27Kip1 expression.

Authors:  Beata Jablonska; Joseph Scafidi; Adan Aguirre; Flora Vaccarino; Vien Nguyen; Erzsebet Borok; Tamas L Horvath; David H Rowitch; Vittorio Gallo
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2012-10-17       Impact factor: 6.167

5.  Posterior fontanelle sonography: an acoustic window into the neonatal brain.

Authors:  Flavia Correa; Goya Enríquez; José Rosselló; Javier Lucaya; Joaquim Piqueras; Celestino Aso; Elida Vázquez; Arantxa Ortega; Alfredo Gallart
Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 3.825

Review 6.  Preterm neuroimaging and neurodevelopmental outcome: a focus on intraventricular hemorrhage, post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus, and associated brain injury.

Authors:  Rebecca A Dorner; Vera Joanna Burton; Marilee C Allen; Shenandoah Robinson; Bruno P Soares
Journal:  J Perinatol       Date:  2018-08-30       Impact factor: 2.521

7.  Brain changes on magnetic resonance imaging in school-age children who had been preterm infants with intracranial hemorrhage.

Authors:  Leandro Lopes Fernandes Alves; Marcia Salim de Martino; Cristina Ortiz Sobrinho; Adauto Dutra Moraes Barbosa
Journal:  Radiol Bras       Date:  2017 Nov-Dec
  7 in total

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