Inder T E, Huppi P S, Warfield S, Kikinis R, Zientara G P, Barnes P D, Jolesz F, Volpe J J
Department of Neurology, Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston 02115, MA, USA.
Ann Neurol. 1999 Nov;46(5):755-60. doi: 10.1002/1531-8249(199911)46:5<755::aid-ana11>3.0.co;2-0.
Periventricular white matter injury, that is, periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), the dominant form of brain injury in the premature infant, is the major neuropathological substrate associated with the motor and cognitive deficits observed later in such infants. The nature of the relationship of this lesion to the subsequent cognitive deficits is unclear, but such deficits raise the possibility of cerebral cortical neuronal dysfunction. Although cortical neuronal necrosis is not a prominent feature of brain injury in premature infants, the possibility of a deleterious effect of PVL on subsequent cerebral cortical development has not been investigated. An advanced quantitative volumetric three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging technique was used to measure brain tissue volumes at term in premature infants with earlier ultrasonographic and magnetic resonance imaging evidence of PVL (mean gestational age at birth, 28.7 +/- 2.0 weeks; n = 10), in premature infants with normal imaging studies (mean gestational age at birth, 29.0 +/- 2.1 weeks; n = 10), and in control term infants (n = 14). Premature infants with PVL had a marked reduction in cerebral cortical gray matter at term compared with either premature infants without PVL or normal term infants (mean +/- SD: PVL, 157.5 +/- 41.5 ml; no PVL, 211.7 +/- 25.4 ml; normal term, 218.8 +/- 21.3 ml). As expected, a reduction in the volume of total brain myelinated white matter was also noted (mean +/- SD: PVL, 14.5 +/- 4.6 ml; no PVL, 23.1 +/- 6.9 ml; normal term, 27.6 +/- 10.3 ml). An apparent compensatory increase in total cerebrospinal fluid volume also was found (mean +/- SD: PVL, 64.5 +/- 15.2 ml; no PVL, 52.0 +/- 24.1 ml; normal term, 32.9 +/- 13.5 ml). PVL in the premature infant is shown for the first time to be followed by impaired cerebral cortical development. These findings may provide insight into the anatomical correlate for the intellectual deficits associated with PVL in the premature infant.
脑室周围白质损伤,即脑室周围白质软化(PVL),是早产儿脑损伤的主要形式,是与这些婴儿后期出现的运动和认知缺陷相关的主要神经病理学基础。这种病变与随后的认知缺陷之间关系的本质尚不清楚,但这些缺陷增加了大脑皮质神经元功能障碍的可能性。虽然皮质神经元坏死不是早产儿脑损伤的突出特征,但PVL对随后大脑皮质发育的有害影响尚未得到研究。采用先进的定量容积三维磁共振成像技术,对出生时具有PVL早期超声和磁共振成像证据的早产儿(出生时平均胎龄28.7±2.0周;n = 10)、影像学检查正常的早产儿(出生时平均胎龄29.0±2.1周;n = 10)以及足月对照婴儿(n = 14)进行足月时脑组织体积测量。与无PVL的早产儿或足月正常婴儿相比,有PVL的早产儿足月时大脑皮质灰质明显减少(平均值±标准差:PVL,157.5±41.5 ml;无PVL,211.7±25.4 ml;足月正常,218.8±21.3 ml)。正如预期的那样,还观察到全脑有髓白质体积减少(平均值±标准差:PVL,14.5±4.6 ml;无PVL,23.1±6.9 ml;足月正常,27.6±10.3 ml)。还发现脑脊液总体积有明显的代偿性增加(平均值±标准差:PVL,64.5±15.2 ml;无PVL,52.0±24.1 ml;足月正常,32.9±13.5 ml)。首次表明早产儿的PVL会导致大脑皮质发育受损。这些发现可能为早产儿PVL相关智力缺陷的解剖学关联提供见解。