| Literature DB >> 33796072 |
Laura Costanza De Angelis1,2, Giorgia Brigati1, Giulia Polleri1, Mariya Malova1,2, Alessandro Parodi1,2, Diego Minghetti1, Andrea Rossi3,4, Paolo Massirio1,2, Cristina Traggiai1, Mohamad Maghnie2,5, Luca Antonio Ramenghi1,2.
Abstract
Neonatal hypoglycemia is a common condition. A transient reduction in blood glucose values is part of a transitional metabolic adaptation following birth, which resolves within the first 48 to 72 h of life. In addition, several factors may interfere with glucose homeostasis, especially in case of limited metabolic stores or increased energy expenditure. Although the effect of mild transient asymptomatic hypoglycemia on brain development remains unclear, a correlation between severe and prolonged hypoglycemia and cerebral damage has been proven. A selective vulnerability of some brain regions to hypoglycemia including the second and the third superficial layers of the cerebral cortex, the dentate gyrus, the subiculum, the CA1 regions in the hippocampus, and the caudate-putamen nuclei has been observed. Several mechanisms contribute to neuronal damage during hypoglycemia. Neuronal depolarization induced by hypoglycemia leads to an elevated release of glutamate and aspartate, thus promoting excitotoxicity, and to an increased release of zinc to the extracellular space, causing the extensive activation of poly ADP-ribose polymerase-1 which promotes neuronal death. In this review we discuss the cerebral glucose homeostasis, the mechanisms of brain injury following neonatal hypoglycemia and the possible treatment strategies to reduce its occurrence.Entities:
Keywords: brain damage; brain energetics; glucose homeostasis; glucose sensing neurons; neonatal hypoglycemia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33796072 PMCID: PMC8008815 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.634305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Definition of neonatal hypoglycemia in the first 72 h from birth, according to the more widespread recommendations.
| Definition of neonatal hypoglycemia (mg/dl) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Institution, year | Time from birth | |||||
| 0–2 h | 2–4 h | 4–24 h | 24–48 h | 48–72 h | >72 h | |
| AAP, 2011 ( | <40 mg/dl | <45 mg/dl | <60 mg/dl | |||
| ABM, 2014 ( | <28 mg/dl | <40 mg/dl | <48 mg/dl | |||
| PES, 2015 ( | <50 mg/dl | <60 mg/dl | ||||
| BAPM, 2017 ( | <45 mg/dl if symptomatic | |||||
| CPS 2019 ( | <47 mg/dl | |||||
| SNG, 2019 ( | <47 mg/dl | <54 mg/dl | ||||
AAP, American Academy of Pediatrics; BAPM, British Association of Perinatal Medicine; ABM, Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine; CPS, Canadian Pediatric Society; SNG, Swedish national guidelines; PES, Pediatric Endocrine Society.
Figure 1Magnetic resonance imaging of a term newborn with apnea and seizures associated with severe hypoglycemia. (A) scans performed after 5 days from the event (acute phase), 1 = axial T2 weighted imaging showing an extensive cortical and subcortical damage, manly in the occipital lobes, with loss of cortical differentiation; 2 = Diffusion weighted imaging shows a large posterior subcortical area of reduction of the apparent diffusion coefficient. (B) scans performed after 5 weeks (chronic phase): 3 = Presence of an occipital atrophic area, more extended within the left occipital lobe; 4 = Diffusion weighted imaging shows an increased water diffusion in the affected areas and a smaller cavitation.
A summary of cited studies regarding neurodevelopmental outcomes and other brain injuries in infants with neonatal hypoglycemia.
| Study | Study type | Cohort year | Study population | Key imaging findings | Key outcome findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caraballo, 2004 ( | retrospective cohort | 1990–2003 | 15 infants with epilepsy and/or posterior cerebral lesions and NH | 13/15 patients presented parieto-occipital lesions | 1 patient: no seizures; 12 patients: focal seizures and posterior abnormalities on the EEG, the majority with a good outcome; 2 patients: encephalopathy with refractory seizures (after prolonged refractory NH). |
| Filan, 2006 ( | retrospective cohort | 2004 | 4 term and late-preterm infants with NH | Abnormalities detected in occipital and parietal cortex and white matter, corpus callosum, and optic radiations. | At 1 year of age, one case presented microcephaly, gross motor delay, and visual impairment, while other 3 cases had normal follow-up at 9 months. |
| Burns, 2008 ( | retrospective cohort | 1992–2006 | 35 term infants with symptomatic NH and 229 controls | White matter abnormalities observed in 94% of infants with NH, with predominantly posterior pattern in 29% of cases. Cortical involvement present in 51% of cases, basal ganglia/thalamic abnormalities in 40%, white matter hemorrhages in 30%, and middle cerebral artery infarctions observed in 3 infants. | At 18 months of age, 65% of infants presented impairments related to the white matter damage. Early MRI findings were more instructive than severity or duration of hypoglycemia in predicting neurodevelopmental outcomes. |
| Tam, 2008 ( | retrospective cohort | 2000–2005 | 45 neonates of different gestational ages with NH | Diffusion MRI restriction in the mesial occipital poles observed in ½ of term infants with early imaging. | No long-term visual loss in infants with single-day NH. Cortical visual loss in 1/3 of infants with NH lasting ≥2 days. |
| Kerstjens, 2012 ( | community-based stratified cohort | 2002–2003 | 832 moderately preterm infants | – | Around 4 years of age, NH was found to increase the risk of developmental delay in moderately preterm-born children. |
| Tam, 2012 ( | prospective cohort | 1994–2010 | 94 term neonates at risk for neonatal encephalopathy | NH associated with a 3.72-fold increased odds of corticospinal tract injury (P=0.047). | At 1 year of age, NH was assosiated with 4.82-fold increased odds of one-point worsened neuromotor score (P=0.038) and a 15-point lower cognitive and language score on the Bayley Scales of Infant Development (P=0.015). |
| Wong, 2013 ( | cohort | 2004–2010 | 179 term infants with neonatal encephalopathy | Specific imaging features for both NH and HIE can be identified. Selective edema in the posterior white matter, pulvinar, and anterior medial thalamic nuclei were most predictive for NH, while no injury (36%) or a watershed (32%) pattern of injury were seen more often in severe NH. | – |
| van der Aa, 2013 ( | retrospective | 2000–2012 | 18 infants with perinatal arterial ischemic stroke in the PCA territory | 7/18 patients diagnosed with NH → possible relation between hypoglycemic brain damage and posterior stroke. | – |
| Gataullina, 2013 ( | retrospective cohort | – | 50 patients with symptomatic metabolic hypoglycaemia at 1 day–5 years | Parieto-occipital white matter lesions were observed in infants with hypoglycaemia occurring from the neonatal period to 6 months of age. | Clinical sequelae were severe (global psychomotor delay, microcephaly, motor deficit, lack of visual contact, and/ or pharmacoresistant epilepsy) in 22 children and mild (speech delay, learning difficulties, and pharmacosensitive epilepsy) in 13 others; 15 children experienced no sequelae. |
| Fong, 2014 ( | retrospective | 1996–2012 | 11 patients with seizures beyond infancy after NH | All children presented gliosis with or without cortical atrophy in the occipital lobe with or without parietal lobe involvement. | Despite having bilateral occipital brain injury and neurological disability, 6/11 children with epilepsy after NH had infrequent and potentially age-limited focal seizures. |
| McKinlay, 2015 ( | prospective cohort | 2006–2010 | 404 term and late preterm neonates at risk for NH treated to maintain blood glucose ≥47 mg/dl | – | At 2 years of age, no increased risk of neurosensory impairment or processing difficulty in infants with NH. No correlation between the lowest blood glucose concentration, number of hypoglycemic episodes, or episodes of unrecognized hypoglycemia, and the given outcome. |
| Kaiser, 2015 ( | retrospective population-based cohort | 1998 | 1943 infants of different gestational ages | – | At 10 years of age, an association was found between early transient hypoglycemia and decreased probability of proficiency on literacy and mathematics achievement tests. |
| Goode, 2016 ( | secondary analysis of a longitudinal study | 1985 | 743 preterm infants stratified into 4 groups by glucose level | – | No significant differences in cognitive or academic skills at 3, 8, and 18 years of age were observed in preterm-borninfants stratified by glucose level. |
| Basu, 2016 ( | secondary analysis of a randomized study | 1999–2002 | 214 neonates with HIE | – | A greater risk of unfavorable outcome observed in infants with HIE and NH |
| McKinlay, 2017 ( | prospective cohort | 2006–2010 | 477 term and late preterm neonates at risk for NH treated to maintain blood glucose ≥47 mg/dl | – | At 4.5 years of age, NH was not assosiated with increased risk of combined neurosensory impairment, but was assosiated with increased risk of poor executive and visual motor functions. Highest risk in children exposed to severe, recurrent, or clinically undetected NH. |
| Basu, 2018 ( | secondary analysis of a prospective study | 2008–2016 | 178 neonates with HIE | An association observed between early NH in infants with HIE and watershed or focal-multifocal injury on MRI. | – |
NH, neonatal hypoglycemia; HIE, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy; PCA, posterior cerebral artery.
Risk factors associated with hypoglycemia.
| Maternal conditions |
|---|
| Diabetes or altered glucose tolerance |
|
|
| Premature birth (<37 weeks) |