| Literature DB >> 27812521 |
Krishna Revanna Gopagondanahalli1, Jingang Li2, Michael C Fahey3, Rod W Hunt4, Graham Jenkin5, Suzanne L Miller5, Atul Malhotra3.
Abstract
Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) is a recognizable and defined clinical syndrome in term infants that results from a severe or prolonged hypoxic-ischemic episode before or during birth. However, in the preterm infant, defining hypoxic-ischemic injury (HII), its clinical course, monitoring, and outcomes remains complex. Few studies examine preterm HIE, and these are heterogeneous, with variable inclusion criteria and outcomes reported. We examine the available evidence that implies that the incidence of hypoxic-ischemic insult in preterm infants is probably higher than recognized and follows a more complex clinical course, with higher rates of adverse neurological outcomes, compared to term infants. This review aims to elucidate the causes and consequences of preterm hypoxia-ischemia, the subsequent clinical encephalopathy syndrome, diagnostic tools, and outcomes. Finally, we suggest a uniform definition for preterm HIE that may help in identifying infants most at risk of adverse outcomes and amenable to neuroprotective therapies.Entities:
Keywords: asphyxia; cerebral palsy; encephalopathy; excitotoxicity; preterm brain injury
Year: 2016 PMID: 27812521 PMCID: PMC5071348 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2016.00114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Pathophysiological mechanisms involved in preterm hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy. Cx, cortex; SCWM, subcortical white matter; PVWM, periventricular white matter; BG, basal ganglia; IC, internal capsule.
Published studies on preterm HIE.
| Study (reference, type, number of patients) | Gestational age (weeks) | Criteria for HIE | Clinical features | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barkovich and Sargent 1995 ( | 27–32 | Profound hypoxia at birth | None mentioned | Pattern of injury on MRI |
| Salhab and Perlman 2005 ( | 31–36 | Fetal acidemia (cord arterial pH <7) | Abnormal neurological examination based on Sarnat staging | 3 out of 8 babies died |
| Abnormal neurological outcome seen in those with low 1 and 5 min Apgar, need for CPR, mechanical ventilation | No mention on long-term neurological outcome | |||
| Logitharajah et al. 2009 ( | 26–36 | Apgar scores <5 at 1 and <7 at 5 min | Longer duration of assisted ventilation and seizures was associated with severe outcome/death | Mainly focused on imaging pattern in preterm HI insult and long-term neurological outcome associated with imaging abnormality |
| Major resuscitation (intubation/cardiopulmonary resuscitation/adrenaline) at birth | ||||
| Brain MRI within 6 postnatal week | ||||
| Additional inclusion criteria: abnormal intrapartum CTG, sentinel event, meconium staining, cord pH <7, neonatal seizures, and multiorgan failure | ||||
| Schmidt and Walsh 2010 ( | 32–36 | 5-min Apgar score <6 | Incidence 0.9%, significant acidosis, poor tone, seizures | 25% of study population died. 44% had long-term neurological adverse outcome |
| Cord or initial patient blood pH <7, or base deficit >15 mmol/L | ||||
| Evidence of encephalopathy at or shortly after birth (seizures, hypotonia) | ||||
| History of a sentinel event at the time of delivery | ||||
| Chalak et al. 2012 ( | 33–35 | pH <7 and base deficit >16 mmol/L | Incidence 5/1000 live births | Stages 1 and 2 had normal neurological outcomes |
| Sentinel event | Graded according to Sarnat staging | |||
| 10-min Apgar score <5, requiring assisted ventilation at birth | HIE 1 – brief ventilation, mild elevation of liver enzymes, creatinine, normal neurological examination | |||
| HIE 2 – multiple organ injury resolved by 7 h. Normal neuro examination at discharge. One had seizure | ||||
| HIE 3 – severe multiorgan dysfunction, DIC, status epilepticus, prolonged ventilation, persistent abnormal neurological exam |