Literature DB >> 16256280

Movement analysis in neonates with spina bifida aperta.

D A Sival1, O F Brouwer, J L M Bruggink, J S H Vles, A L Staal-Schreinemachers, K M Sollie, P J J Sauer, A F Bos.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In neonates with spina bifida aperta (SBA), leg movements by myotomes caudal to the meningomyelocele (MMC) are transiently observed. It is unclear whether these leg movements relate to functional neural conduction through the MMC. For optimal therapeutical intervention, pathophysiological insight in these transient leg movements seems relevant. If leg movements by myotomes caudal to the MMC concur with the execution of general movements (GMs), functional neural conduction through the MMC is implicated.
OBJECTIVE: In neonates with SBA, we aimed to determine whether the transiently present leg movements caudal to the MMC indicate functional neural conduction through the MMC.
METHODS: During the perinatal period, fetuses and neonates with SBA (n = 7 and n = 13, respectively) were longitudinally analysed for concurrency between leg movements caudal to the MMC and GMs. To address the integrity of the reflex arc in spinal segments (at, or) caudal to the MMC, tendon leg reflexes were assessed during the first postnatal week.
RESULTS: At postnatal day 1, leg movements caudal to the MMC concurred with GMs in 12 of 13 infants. Isolated leg movements were observed in only 3 of these 12 infants (isolated vs. concurrent; p < 0.005). Leg movements concurring with GMs lasted longer than isolated leg movements (median duration = 11 s vs. 2 s; p < 0.05). Between days 1 and 7, tendon leg reflexes (at, or) caudal to the MMC had disappeared in all but 1 neonate. However, leg movements caudal to the MMC remained concurrently present with GMs in all five neonates available for follow-up after day 7. Comparing these leg movements between days 1 and 7 indicated a decreased duration (-44%, p < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: In neonates with SBA, leg movements caudal to the MMC concur with GMs, indicative of functional neural conduction through the MMC. The disappearance of these leg movements is caused by lower motor neuron dysfunction at the reflex arc, whereas neural conduction through the MMC is still functional.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16256280     DOI: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2005.09.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Early Hum Dev        ISSN: 0378-3782            Impact factor:   2.079


  5 in total

1.  In utero Repair of Myelomeningocele: Rationale, Initial Clinical Experience and a Randomized Controlled Prospective Clinical Trial.

Authors:  Enrico Danzer; Alan W Flake
Journal:  Neuroembryology Aging       Date:  2008-02-26

2.  Stepping responses of infants with myelomeningocele when supported on a motorized treadmill.

Authors:  Caroline Teulier; Beth A Smith; Masayoshi Kubo; Chia-Lin Chang; Victoria Moerchen; Karin Murazko; Beverly D Ulrich
Journal:  Phys Ther       Date:  2008-12-04

3.  In spina bifida aperta, muscle ultrasound can quantify the "second hit of damage".

Authors:  R J Verbeek; J H van der Hoeven; N M Maurits; O F Brouwer; E W Hoving; D A Sival
Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst       Date:  2012-11-09       Impact factor: 1.475

4.  A unifying hypothesis for hydrocephalus, Chiari malformation, syringomyelia, anencephaly and spina bifida.

Authors:  Helen Williams
Journal:  Cerebrospinal Fluid Res       Date:  2008-04-11

5.  Early neonatal loss of inhibitory synaptic input to the spinal motor neurons confers spina bifida-like leg dysfunction in a chicken model.

Authors:  Md Sakirul Islam Khan; Hiroaki Nabeka; Farzana Islam; Tetsuya Shimokawa; Shouichiro Saito; Xuan Li; Soichiro Kawabe; Fumihiko Hamada; Tetsuya Tachibana; Seiji Matsuda
Journal:  Dis Model Mech       Date:  2017-12-19       Impact factor: 5.758

  5 in total

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