Anderson Nigel G, Laurent Isabelle, Woodward Lianne J, Inder Terrie E
Department of Radiology, Christchurch Hospital, Riccarton Avenue, Christchurch 8001, New Zealand.
Pediatrics. 2006 Sep;118(3):951-60. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-0553.
There is an urgent need for a bedside method to assess the effectiveness of neonatal therapies designed to improve cerebral development in very low birth-weight infants. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of preterm birth on the serial growth of the corpus callosum and how soon it could be detected after birth with cranial ultrasound.
We recruited 61 very low birth-weight infants admitted to a single regional level III NICU from 1998 to 2000. Study infants had 2 cranial sonograms > or = 7 days apart in the first 2 weeks of life and further sonograms at 6 weeks and at term equivalent. At each time point, the length of the corpus callosum and cerebellar vermis was measured on midline sagittal images, with growth rates calculated in millimeters per day. We compared growth of corpus callosum and cerebellar vermis in individuals, between birth age groups, and with corrected gestational age. We used antenatal growth rate of the corpus callosum of 0.2 to 0.27 mm/day as a reference. Relationships between corpus callosum growth rates and neurodevelopmental outcome at 2 years of age (corrected) were also examined.
Growth of the corpus callosum was normal in most infants during the first 2 weeks of life but slowed after this (0.21 mm/day from 0-2 weeks vs 0.11 mm/day for weeks 2-6). Slowing of corpus callosum growth below expected reference range was consistently detectable by age 6 weeks for 96% of infants born between 23 and 33 weeks' gestation. Although some improvement in growth rate was observed for 15% of infants after 6 weeks, this was confined to infants born after 28 weeks. Vermis length correlated strongly with corpus callosum length. By 2 years of age, serious motor delay and cerebral palsy were associated with poorer growth of the length of the corpus callosum between 2 and 6 weeks after birth.
The effect of preterm birth on growth of the corpus callosum is detectable by 6 weeks after delivery in preterm infants born at gestations of 23 to 33 weeks. Reduced growth of the corpus callosum in weeks 2 to 6, places these infants at elevated risks of later psychomotor delay and cerebral palsy.
迫切需要一种床旁方法来评估旨在改善极低出生体重儿脑发育的新生儿治疗方法的有效性。本研究的目的是评估早产对胼胝体连续生长的影响,以及出生后通过头颅超声能多快检测到这种影响。
我们招募了1998年至2000年入住一家地区三级新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)的61名极低出生体重儿。研究婴儿在出生后2周内接受了2次间隔≥7天的头颅超声检查,并在6周和足月时进行了进一步的超声检查。在每个时间点,在中线矢状位图像上测量胼胝体和小脑蚓部的长度,计算每天的生长速率(以毫米为单位)。我们比较了个体、不同出生年龄组以及校正胎龄时胼胝体和小脑蚓部的生长情况。我们将胼胝体产前生长速率0.2至0.27毫米/天作为参考。还研究了胼胝体生长速率与2岁(校正)时神经发育结局之间的关系。
大多数婴儿在出生后的前2周胼胝体生长正常,但此后生长减缓(0至2周为0.21毫米/天,而第2至6周为0.11毫米/天)。对于96%孕周在23至33周之间出生的婴儿,在6周龄时始终可以检测到胼胝体生长低于预期参考范围。虽然6周后15%的婴儿生长速率有所改善,但仅限于28周后出生的婴儿。蚓部长度与胼胝体长度密切相关。到2岁时,严重运动发育迟缓及脑瘫与出生后2至6周胼胝体长度生长较差有关。
对于孕周在23至33周的早产儿,在出生后6周可检测到早产对胼胝体生长的影响。第2至6周胼胝体生长减缓使这些婴儿后期发生精神运动发育迟缓及脑瘫的风险升高。