Lee Mongerson Chandler Rebecca, Jennings Russell William, Zurakowski David, Bajic Dusica
Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Bader 3, 300 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA, United States.
Esophageal and Airway Treatment Center, Department of Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA, United States.
Int J Dev Neurosci. 2019 Dec;79:11-20. doi: 10.1016/j.ijdevneu.2019.09.005. Epub 2019 Sep 26.
Little is known regarding the impact of concurrent critical illness and thoracic noncardiac perioperative critical care on postnatal brain development. Previously, we reported smaller total brain volumes in both critically ill full-term and premature patients following complex perioperative critical care for long-gap esophageal atresia (LGEA). Our current report assessed trends in regional brain sizes during infancy, and probed for any group differences.
Full-term (n = 13) and preterm (n = 13) patients without any previously known neurological concerns, and control infants (n = 16), underwent non-sedated 3 T MRI in infancy (<1 year old). T2-weighted images underwent semi-automated brain segmentation using Morphologically Adaptive Neonatal Tissue Segmentation (MANTiS). Regional tissue volumes of the forebrain, deep gray matter (DGM), cerebellum, and brainstem are presented as absolute (cm3) and normalized (% total brain volume (%TBV)) values. Group differences were assessed using a general linear model univariate analysis with corrected age at scan as a covariate.
Absolute volumes of regions analyzed increased with advancing age, paralleling total brain size, but were significantly smaller in both full-term and premature patients compared to controls. Normalized volumes (%TBV) of forebrain, DGM, and cerebellum were not different between subject groups analyzed. Normalized brainstem volumes showed group differences that warrant future studies to confirm the same finding.
Both full-term and premature critically ill infants undergoing life-saving surgery for LGEA are at risk of smaller total and regional brain sizes. Normalized volumes support globally delayed or diminished brain growth in patients. Future research should look into neurodevelopmental outcomes of infants born with LGEA.
关于危重症与胸科非心脏围手术期重症监护对产后脑发育的影响,目前所知甚少。此前,我们报道了患有长间隙食管闭锁(LGEA)的危重症足月和早产患者在接受复杂围手术期重症监护后,全脑体积较小。我们当前的报告评估了婴儿期区域脑大小的趋势,并探究了是否存在组间差异。
13名足月(n = 13)和13名早产(n = 13)且此前无任何已知神经问题的患者,以及16名对照婴儿,在婴儿期(<1岁)接受了非镇静3T磁共振成像(MRI)检查。使用形态学自适应新生儿组织分割(MANTiS)对T2加权图像进行半自动脑分割。前脑、深部灰质(DGM)、小脑和脑干的区域组织体积以绝对值(cm³)和归一化值(占全脑体积的百分比(%TBV))表示。使用一般线性模型单变量分析评估组间差异,并将扫描时的校正年龄作为协变量。
所分析区域的绝对体积随着年龄增长而增加,与全脑大小平行,但足月和早产患者的绝对体积均显著小于对照组。所分析的各受试者组之间,前脑、DGM和小脑的归一化体积(%TBV)没有差异。归一化脑干体积显示出组间差异,这需要未来的研究来证实这一发现。
接受LGEA挽救生命手术的足月和早产危重症婴儿均有全脑和区域脑体积较小的风险。归一化体积表明患者的脑生长在整体上延迟或减少。未来的研究应关注患有LGEA的婴儿的神经发育结局。