Brennan T L, Funk S G, Frothingham T E
Dev Med Child Neurol. 1985 Dec;27(6):746-50. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.1985.tb03798.x.
The authors examined the relationship between disproportionate intra-uterine head growth, or a relatively small head, and later development, using data collected as part of the Collaborative Perinatal Project of the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke. Within the population of infants who are normal by conventional criteria (term infants with appropriate weight and head-circumference for gestational age), a group with relatively small heads was defined by each of four different methods. Developmental outcome measures included the Bayley Mental and Motor Scales at eight months, Stanford-Binet IQ at four years and Wechsler Intelligence Scales IQ at seven years. No clinically meaningful differences in developmental outcome were found between the infants with relatively small heads and the remainder of the infants.
作者利用作为国立神经与交流障碍及中风研究所围产期协作项目一部分收集的数据,研究了子宫内头部生长不成比例或头部相对较小与后期发育之间的关系。在按传统标准属于正常的婴儿群体(足月出生、体重和头围与孕周相符的婴儿)中,通过四种不同方法分别定义了一组头部相对较小的婴儿。发育结果测量指标包括8个月时的贝利智力和运动量表、4岁时的斯坦福-比奈智力量表以及7岁时的韦氏智力量表。头部相对较小的婴儿与其余婴儿在发育结果方面未发现具有临床意义的差异。