| Literature DB >> 19386357 |
David E Odd1, Glyn Lewis, Andrew Whitelaw, David Gunnell.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mild cerebral injury might cause subtle defects in cognitive function that are only detectable as the child grows older. Our aim was to determine whether infants receiving resuscitation after birth, but with no symptoms of encephalopathy, have reduced intelligence quotient (IQ) scores in childhood.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19386357 PMCID: PMC2688587 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(09)60244-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet ISSN: 0140-6736 Impact factor: 79.321
FigureStudy profile
*Infants excluded to ensure that the effect of resuscitation and encephalopathy on IQ was not biased by other diseases. †Verbal, performance, and full-scale IQ did not always need full subtest data for calculation.
Characteristics of resuscitated infants, with or without symptoms of encephalopathy
| Asymptomatic | Symptoms of encephalopathy | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal age (years) (n=11 481) | 28·08 (4·96) | 27·87 (4·97) | 27·84 (4·74) | 0·499 | |
| Maternal socioeconomic group (n=9500) | |||||
| Professional | 541 (6%) | 40 (6%) | 3 (6%) | 0·191 | |
| Managerial | 2766 (32%) | 189 (28%) | 9 (19%) | ||
| Skilled non-manual | 3374 (38%) | 286 (43%) | 24 (50%) | ||
| Skilled manual | 986 (11%) | 78 (12%) | 6 (13%) | ||
| Semi-skilled | 913 (10%) | 55 (8%) | 6 (13%) | ||
| Unskilled | 207 (2%) | 17 (3%) | 0 | ||
| Mother's highest educational qualification (n=10 258) | |||||
| CSE | 1864 (20%) | 157 (22%) | 8 (15%) | 0·026 | |
| Vocational | 921 (10%) | 69 (10%) | 5 (9%) | ||
| O Level | 3264 (34%) | 282 (39%) | 15 (28%) | ||
| A Level | 2145 (23%) | 146 (20%) | 16 (30%) | ||
| Degree | 1286 (14%) | 71 (10%) | 9 (17%) | ||
| Housing tenure (n=10 718) | |||||
| Mortgaged or owned | 7347 (74%) | 566 (74%) | 45 (79%) | 0·565 | |
| Council rented | 1426 (14%) | 100 (13%) | 5 (9%) | ||
| Private rented | 1127 (11%) | 95 (13%) | 7 (12%) | ||
| Car ownership (n=10 727) | |||||
| ≥1 | 8873 (90%) | 680 (90%) | 52 (91%) | 0·915 | |
| None | 1037 (11%) | 80 (11%) | 5 (9%) | ||
| Crowding index (number of household members per room) (n=10 566) | |||||
| <0·5 | 4103 (42%) | 354 (47%) | 32 (57%) | 0·009 | |
| 0·5–0·75 | 4992 (51%) | 341 (45%) | 20 (36%) | ||
| 0·75–1 | 469 (5%) | 43 (6%) | 4 (7%) | ||
| 1+ | 193 (2%) | 15 (2%) | 0 | ||
| Ethnicity (n=11 255) | |||||
| Non-white | 584 (6%) | 42 (5%) | 8 (14%) | 0·021 | |
| White | 9818 (94%) | 754 (95%) | 49 (86%) | ||
| Primiparous (n=11 482) | 4338 (41%) | 421 (52%) | 36 (62%) | <0·0001 | |
| Maternal hypertension (n=11 482) | 301 (3%) | 36 (4%) | 4 (7%) | 0·008 | |
| Maternal pyrexia (n=11 482) | 45 (0·4%) | 9 (1%) | 3 (5%) | <0·0001 | |
| Method of birth (n=11 481) | |||||
| Spontaneous cephalic | 8370 (79%) | 429 (53%) | 19 (33%) | <0·0001 | |
| Emergency caesarean section | 465 (4%) | 156 (19%) | 22 (38%) | ||
| Elective caesarian section | 415 (4%) | 39 (5%) | 6 (10%) | ||
| Instrumental | 1276 (12%) | 138 (17%) | 8 (14%) | ||
| Breech | 83 (1%) | 52 (6%) | 3 (5%) | ||
| Male (n=11 482) | 5401 (51%) | 426 (52%) | 35 (60%) | 0·276 | |
| Gestation (weeks) (n=11 482) | 39·7 (1·4) | 39·8 (1·5) | 39·5 (1·7) | 0·025 | |
| Birthweight (g) (n=11 482) | 3459 (472) | 3443 (524) | 3227 (721) | 0·0007 | |
| Birth length (cm) (n=10 457) | 50·9 (2·4) | 51·0 (2·5) | 51·0 (2·4) | 0·490 | |
| Head circumference (cm) (n=10 579) | 34·8 (1·4) | 35·0 (1·4) | 35·1 (1·6) | 0·004 | |
| Apgar score at 1 min (n=11 482) | 9 (9–9) | 5 (4–6) | 4 (3–5) | <0·0001 | |
| Apgar score at 5 min (n=11 470) | 10 (9–10) | 9 (8–9) | 7 (6–9) | <0·0001 | |
| Developed cerebral palsy (n=11 482) | 8 (<1%) | 2 (<1%) | 3 (5%) | <0·0001 | |
Data are mean (SD) for normally distributed continuous variables, median (IQR) for skewed continuous variables, or number of infants (%). Data are complete for only some covariates and therefore the denominator varies for different factors.
p values compare all three groups.
The percentages shown are based on the numbers in the individual groups rather than the whole group.
CSE=assessment at age 15–16 years; O Level=assessment at age 15–16 years; A Level=assessment at age 17–18 years.
Comparison between Apgar score and resuscitation status
| <7 | 373 (3%) | 675 (6%) | 1048 (9%) |
| 7–10 | 10 236 (89%) | 198 (2%) | 10 434 (91%) |
| <7 | 3 (<1%) | 84 (1%) | 87 (1%) |
| 7–10 | 10 596 (92%) | 787 (7%) | 11 383 (99%) |
Data are number of infants (% of the whole group).
Mean verbal, performance, and full-scale IQ scores for resuscitated infants, with or without symptoms of encephalopathy
| Asymptomatic (n=400) | Symptoms of encephalopathy (n=26) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verbal IQ (n=5913) | 107·6 (16·6) | 106·4 (17·3) | 101·0 (18·9) | 0·06 |
| Performance IQ (n=5907) | 100·0 (16·9) | 99·7 (17·3) | 88·1 (20·6) | 0·002 |
| Full-scale IQ (n=5887) | 104·6 (16·3) | 103·8 (17·1) | 94·5 (19·9) | 0·005 |
Data are mean (SD).
Verbal IQ n=5487; performance IQ n=5481; full-scale IQ n=5461.
p values compare all three groups.
Proportion of low verbal, performance, and full-scale IQ scores for resuscitated infants, with or without symptoms of encephalopathy
| Asymptomatic (n=400) | Symptoms of encephalopathy (n=26) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low verbal IQ (n=5913) | 253 (5%) | 26 (7%) | 2 (8%) | 0·179 |
| Low performance IQ (n=5907) | 707 (13%) | 52 (13%) | 11 (42%) | 0·0001 |
| Low full-scale IQ (n=5887) | 354 (7%) | 39 (10%) | 6 (23%) | 0·0004 |
Data are number of infants (%). The percentages shown are based on the numbers in the individual groups rather than the whole group.
Verbal IQ n=5487; performance IQ n=5481; full-scale IQ n=5461.
p values compare all three groups.
Probability of low IQ score for resuscitated infants, with or without symptoms of encephalopathy
| Reference group | 1·00 | 1·00 | ||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | 1·44 (0·95–2·18) | 0·088 | 1·42 (0·90–2·25) | 0·144 |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | 1·72 (0·40–7·35) | 0·461 | 2·01 (0·23–17·18) | 0·538 |
| Reference group | 1·00 | 1·00 | ||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | 1·01 (0·75–1·37) | 0·954 | 1·03 (0.75–1.42) | 0·860 |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | 4·95 (2·26–10·83) | <0·0001 | 4·62 (1.48–14.40) | 0·008 |
| Reference group | 1·00 | 1·00 | ||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | 1·56 (1·10–2·21) | 0·012 | 1·65 (1·13–2·43) | 0·010 |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | 4·33 (1·73–10·86) | 0·002 | 6·22 (1·57–24·65) | 0·009 |
Data are odds ratio (95% CI).
Adjusted for sex, neonatal sepsis, parity, gestational age, birthweight, length and head circumference, method of birth, ethnicity, housing tenure, crowding index, and maternal hypertension, education, socioeconomic group, car ownership, and age.
Difference in mean Weschler intelligence scale for children (WISC-III) scores for resuscitated infants, with or without symptoms of encephalopathy, compared with the reference group
| Information (n=5937) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·02 (−0·34 to 0·30) | 0·891 | −0·11 (−0·42 to 0·20) | 0·480 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −0·65 (−1·86 to 0·56) | 0·295 | −1·43 (−2·93 to 0·06) | 0·061 | |
| Arithmetic (n=5927) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·15 (−0·57 to 0·26) | 0·470 | −0·09 (−0·51 to 0·34) | 0·689 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −0·68 (−2·27 to 0·91) | 0·402 | −0·61 (−2·65 to 1·44) | 0·562 | |
| Vocabulary (n=5910) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | 0·05 (−0·40 to 0·49) | 0·843 | −0·01 (−0·44 to 0·42) | 0·962 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −1·58 (−3·27 to 0·12) | 0·068 | −2·53 (−4·61 to −0·44) | 0·018 | |
| Comprehension (n=5879) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·36 (−0·73 to 0·02) | 0·065 | −0·24 (−0·63 to 0·15) | 0·235 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −2·62 (−4·05 to −1·19) | 0·0003 | −2·28 (−4·16 to −0·39) | 0·018 | |
| Similarities (n=5939) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·49 (−0·89 to −0·08) | 0·018 | −0·52 (−0·92 to −0·12) | 0·010 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | 0·00 (−1·53 to 1·53) | 0·997 | −0·82 (−2·75 to 1·11) | 0·406 | |
| Picture completion (n=5919) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·04 (−0·42 to 0·33) | 0·829 | −0·06 (−0·44 to 0·33) | 0·769 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −1·83 (−3·25 to −0·41) | 0·011 | −1·25 (−3·10 to 0·61) | 0·189 | |
| Coding (n=5934) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·05 (−0·35 to 0·26) | 0·769 | 0·01 (−0·32 to 0·30) | 0·959 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −1·13 (−2·29 to 0·03) | 0·057 | −1·46 (−2·95 to 0·03) | 0·054 | |
| Picture arrangement (n=5858) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·11 (−0·60 to 0·37) | 0·644 | −0·28 (−0·79 to 0·22) | 0·274 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −1·11 (−2·95 to 0·72) | 0·234 | −1·70 (−4·13 to 0·73) | 0·169 | |
| Block design (n=5900) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·04 (−0·42 to 0·35) | 0·853 | −0·07 (−0·46 to 0·32) | 0·710 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −1·67 (−3·16 to −0·18) | 0·028 | −0·54 (−2·42 to 1·34) | 0·576 | |
| Object assembly (n=5582) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | 0·00 (−0·39 to 0·39) | 0·995 | 0·04 (−0·37 to 0·44) | 0·847 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −3·33 (−4·85 to −1·81) | <0·0001 | −3·13 (−5·19 to −1·07) | 0·003 | |
| Verbal IQ (n=5913) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −1·17 (−2·86 to 0·53) | 0·178 | −1·18 (−2·79 to 0·43) | 0·152 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −6·56 (−13·00 to −0·12) | 0·046 | −9·15 (−16·95 to −1·35) | 0·022 | |
| Performance IQ (n=5907) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·33 (−2·05 to 1·40) | 0·710 | −0·52 (−2·25 to 1·20) | 0·553 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −11·87 (−18·42 to −5·33) | 0·0004 | −9·99 (−18·35 to −1·64) | 0·019 | |
| Full-scale IQ (n=5887) | |||||
| Asymptomatic resuscitated infants | −0·88 (−2·55 to 0·79) | 0·301 | −0·99 (−2·58 to 0·60) | 0·220 | |
| Resuscitated infants with encephalopathy | −10·09 (−16·42 to −3·77) | 0·002 | −10·64 (−18·32 to −2·97) | 0·007 | |
Data are mean difference in IQ scores (95% CI).
Adjusted for sex, neonatal sepsis, parity, gestational age, birthweight, length and head circumference, method of birth, ethnicity, housing tenure, crowding index, and maternal hypertension, education, socioeconomic group, car ownership, and age.