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Neurodevelopmental outcome of preterm infants with ventricular dilatation with and without associated haemorrhage

Neurodevelopmental outcome of preterm infants with ventricular dilatation with and without associated haemorrhage
Neurodevelopmental outcome of preterm infants with ventricular dilatation with and without associated haemorrhage
This study investigated whether in preterm children who had ventricular dilatation (VD) on neonatal cranial ultrasound outcome at age 8 years was influenced by the additional presence of germinal matrix haemorrhage--intraventricular haemorrhage (GMH-IVH). Six-hundred and ninety-nine preterm infants (<33 wks' gestation, mean 29.6 wks [SD 2.1]) with either normal cranial ultrasound (n=616; 286 females, 330 males), or with VD with (n=66; 32 females, 34 males) or without (n=17; 4 females, 13 males) GMH-IVH were enrolled in the study. At age 8 years outcome was assessed in 567 (81%) of the 699 children by neurological examination, the Test of Motor Impairment (TOMI), the test of Visuo-Motor Integration (VMI), and the Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children. Results showed that the proportion of children with disabling impairments was higher in the group with VD and GMH-IVH. Performance on TOMI and VMI (even in those without disabling impairments) was poorer in those with VD and GMH-IVH than in children with normal scans or those with VD only. Children with VD and GMH-IVH had significantly lower performance IQ than children with normal ultrasound, whereas those with VD only were not different from those with normal scans. Results suggest the presence of subtle white matter injury that has not been identified by neonatal cranial ultrasound. Although this study did not investigate biochemical markers of haemorrhage, we hypothesize that non-protein-bound iron is likely to be a contributing factor to white matter damage in preterm infants.
1469-8749
348-352
Vollmer, Brigitte
044f8b55-ba36-4fb2-8e7e-756ab77653ba
Roth, Simon
5de63212-d239-4638-8015-95e2a6496181
Riley, Katharine
4ce496fb-1d93-4e92-a052-cbb87545c09f
Sellwood, Mark W.
0c1ae210-d271-4eae-aaf3-eb92e27f7573
Baudin, Jenny
3790a784-0e19-483d-a187-b25079ddeaad
Neville, Brian G.R.
5bf24a34-726a-4421-8052-e29e416aa819
Wyatt, John S.
e0f73250-efa3-4bb6-adf6-ab0c92432ccb
Vollmer, Brigitte
044f8b55-ba36-4fb2-8e7e-756ab77653ba
Roth, Simon
5de63212-d239-4638-8015-95e2a6496181
Riley, Katharine
4ce496fb-1d93-4e92-a052-cbb87545c09f
Sellwood, Mark W.
0c1ae210-d271-4eae-aaf3-eb92e27f7573
Baudin, Jenny
3790a784-0e19-483d-a187-b25079ddeaad
Neville, Brian G.R.
5bf24a34-726a-4421-8052-e29e416aa819
Wyatt, John S.
e0f73250-efa3-4bb6-adf6-ab0c92432ccb

Vollmer, Brigitte, Roth, Simon, Riley, Katharine, Sellwood, Mark W., Baudin, Jenny, Neville, Brian G.R. and Wyatt, John S. (2006) Neurodevelopmental outcome of preterm infants with ventricular dilatation with and without associated haemorrhage. Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology., 48 (5), 348-352. (doi:10.1017/S0012162206000764). (PMID:16608542)

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study investigated whether in preterm children who had ventricular dilatation (VD) on neonatal cranial ultrasound outcome at age 8 years was influenced by the additional presence of germinal matrix haemorrhage--intraventricular haemorrhage (GMH-IVH). Six-hundred and ninety-nine preterm infants (<33 wks' gestation, mean 29.6 wks [SD 2.1]) with either normal cranial ultrasound (n=616; 286 females, 330 males), or with VD with (n=66; 32 females, 34 males) or without (n=17; 4 females, 13 males) GMH-IVH were enrolled in the study. At age 8 years outcome was assessed in 567 (81%) of the 699 children by neurological examination, the Test of Motor Impairment (TOMI), the test of Visuo-Motor Integration (VMI), and the Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children. Results showed that the proportion of children with disabling impairments was higher in the group with VD and GMH-IVH. Performance on TOMI and VMI (even in those without disabling impairments) was poorer in those with VD and GMH-IVH than in children with normal scans or those with VD only. Children with VD and GMH-IVH had significantly lower performance IQ than children with normal ultrasound, whereas those with VD only were not different from those with normal scans. Results suggest the presence of subtle white matter injury that has not been identified by neonatal cranial ultrasound. Although this study did not investigate biochemical markers of haemorrhage, we hypothesize that non-protein-bound iron is likely to be a contributing factor to white matter damage in preterm infants.

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Published date: May 2006
Organisations: Clinical Neurosciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 189421
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/189421
ISSN: 1469-8749
PURE UUID: 7efc1570-97ed-42f9-87b8-dd9c96e1ae36
ORCID for Brigitte Vollmer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4088-5336

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Date deposited: 02 Jun 2011 08:11
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: Simon Roth
Author: Katharine Riley
Author: Mark W. Sellwood
Author: Jenny Baudin
Author: Brian G.R. Neville
Author: John S. Wyatt

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