| Literature DB >> 32532707 |
Revan Mustafayev1, Tarana Seyid-Mammadova2, Colin R Kennedy3, Ilgi Ozturk Ertem4, Brian Forsyth5, Martin Weber6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The WHO reports excessive rates of ill-defined neurological diagnoses and ineffective and potentially harmful drug treatments in children in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). Collectively termed perinatal encephalopathy and the syndrome of intracranial hypertension (PE-SIH), these diagnoses are important contributors to perceived childhood morbidity and disability in the CIS. A systematic compilation of information on PE-SIH is lacking.Entities:
Keywords: Commonwealth of Independent States; overdiagnosis; overmedicalisation; perinatal encephalopathy; syndrome of intracranial hypertension
Year: 2020 PMID: 32532707 PMCID: PMC7513255 DOI: 10.1136/archdischild-2018-315994
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dis Child ISSN: 0003-9888 Impact factor: 3.791
Summary of publications related to perinatal encephalopathy, the syndrome of intracranial hypertension and other diagnostic labels relating to the same clinical phenomena in the Commonwealth of Independent States and Eastern European countries
| Study author and year | Sample | Methodology | Terminology used in the medical records or publication | % (95% CI)* of study sample diagnosed as PE-SIH | N affected in study population | Diagnosed neurological conditions on independent re-evaluation | |
| Clinical populations | |||||||
| Khaletskaia | Infants attending outpatient clinics in Nizhnij Novgorod, Russian Federation. | Outpatient medical record review. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | 82% of 800 infants at 1 month of age. | N/A | N/A | |
| Tsybelova (2007) | Infants born 2003–2005 in a hospital setting in the Russian Federation. | Retrospective medical record review. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | 80.1 | 80% of 909 | N/A | |
| Tatochenko | Infants attending outpatient clinics in Moscow, Russian Federation. | Outpatient medical record review. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | 87.6 (82.8 to 92.3) | 162/185 | 149 out of 162 (92.0%) diagnosed had no neurological pathology, 13 (8.0%) were diagnosed with disorders including cerebral palsy, developmental delay, kernicterus, hydrocephalus, microcephaly and vegetative-visceral syndrome. | |
| Davydov | Infants born 2002–2004 who had health supervision visits at a single primary healthcare centre in Kemerovo, Russian Federation. | Not specified. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | 98.5 (98.2 to 98.8) | 3684/3739 | N/A | |
| Fedorov and Salomova (2009) | Infants attending district outpatient clinics in Moscow, Russian Federation. | Outpatient medical record review. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | N/A | |||
| Born 1995 | Zelenograd | 67.4 (57.9 to 76.8) | 188/237 | ||||
| South West | 84.5 (77.8 to 91.3) | 93/110 | |||||
| Born 1999 or 2000 | Zelenograd | 89.4 (83.1 to 95.6) | 84/94 | ||||
| South West | 79.3 (74.2 to 84.5) | 64/95 | |||||
| Butovo | 32.5 (29.1 to 36.0) | 234/719 | |||||
| Special populations | |||||||
| Miller | Children in Murmansk orphanages, Russian Federation. | Medical record review. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | 46% of infants and | N/A | N/A | |
| Miller (2005) | Children being considered for international adoption from the CIS countries and Eastern Europe. | Medical record review conducted by International Adoption Clinic in the USA. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | 69.2 (59.5 to 77.7) | 74/107 | Except for developmental delay, hypotonia and microcephaly, no other condition has been identified. | |
| Intracranial hypertension syndrome. | 7.5 (2.5 to 12.6) | 8/107 | |||||
| Hydrocephalic-hypertension syndrome. | 7.5 (2.5 to 12.6) | 8/107 | |||||
| Hydrocephalus syndrome. | 4.7 (1.5 to 10.6) | 5/107 | |||||
| Hyperneuroreflectory activity, hyperexcitability, hyperirritability, neuroreflector syndrome, syndrome of heightened neuroreflexical agitation.† | 20.6 (12.9 to 28.2) | 22/107 | |||||
| Vegetative visceral syndrome. | 1.9 (0.2 to 6.6) | 2/107 | |||||
| Yulish | Comparative study of three groups of children under 5 years of age from Donetsk, Ukraine, method of sampling is not reported. | Retrospective medical record review. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | Group 1: 100.0. | Group 1: 89/89. | N/A | |
| Jenista (2000) | Children being considered for international adoption. 2472 (88% of 2814 records) were from Eastern Europe and Russian Federation. | Medical record review conducted by International Adoption Clinic in the USA). | Perinatal encephalopathy. | 60 | N/A | Neurological diagnosis confirmed in 6% patients. Developmental and behavioural problems, as well as several other serious medical conditions diagnosed in 30%. | |
| Hydrocephalic syndrome. | 33 | N/A | |||||
| Perinatal affectation of the central nervous system. | 32 | N/A | |||||
| Spastic tetraparesis or paraparesis. | 29 | N/A | |||||
| Hypertension syndrome. | 22 | N/A | |||||
| Natal trauma to the spine. | 18 | N/A | |||||
| Pyramidal insufficiency. | 11 | N/A | |||||
| Albers | Children being considered for international adoption from the CIS countries and Eastern Europe. | Medical record review conducted by International Adoption Clinic in the USA. | Perinatal encephalopathy. | 53.2 (38.9 to 67.5) | 25/47 | No severe neurological condition diagnosed. Brachial plexus injury, chronic hepatitis B, fetal alcohol syndrome, hipospadias, mild spastic diplegia syndrome, nephrolithiasis, optic nerve atrophy, orthopaedic problems, polydactyly, strabismus and unilateral hearing loss have been identified. | |
| Hyperexcitability. | 8.5 (2.4 to 20.4) | 4/47 | |||||
| Hydrocephalocele syndrome. | 6.4 (1.3 to 17.5) | 3/47 | |||||
| Hypertensive syndrome. | 4.3 (0.5 to 14.5) | 2/47 | |||||
*95% CI has been calculated using reported figures where available.
†Although these diagnostic labels have been listed separately, they all refer to the same clinical phenomena.5
CIS, Commonwealth of Independent States; N/A, not available; PE, perinatal encephalopathy; PE-SIH, perinatal encephalopathy and syndrome of intracranial hypertension; USA, United States of America.