Pinto-Martin J A, Riolo S, Cnaan A, Holzman C, Susser M W, Paneth N
Division of General Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Pediatrics. 1995 Feb;95(2):249-54.
To employ multivariate analytic techniques to assess the association between neonatal cranial ultrasound (US) abnormalities and subsequent cerebral palsy (CP), defined as disabling CP (DCP) or nondisabling CP (NDCP) depending on the level of motor dysfunction.
Prospective cohort study.
The Neonatal Brain Hemorrhage Study enrolled a geographically representative sample of 1105 newborns 501 to 2000 g and obtained follow-up data on 777 (86%) of the 901 survivors at age two. One hundred thirteen children (14.6%) had motor findings severe enough to classify them as having CP. The 61 (7.9%) of these children who were disabled by their motor impairment we classified as having DCP. The remaining 52 (6.7%) who had definite neurologic findings (usually mild spastic diplegia) but without evidence of interference with daily living, we classified as having NDCP.
In a multivariate logistic regression model of perinatal and postnatal variables, the following factors were found to be significant risk factors for DCP: parenchymal echodensities/lucencies or ventricular enlargement (PEL/VE) on cranial US (OR = 15.4; 7.6, 31.1), germinal matrix/intraventricular hemorrhage (GM/IVH) (OR = 3.5; 1.7, 6.9) and mechanical ventilation (OR = 2.9; 1.2, 7.1). Fully 93.4% of infants were correctly classified as to presence or absence of DCP on the basis of this model. Birth weight, gestational age, length of hospital stay, gender, race, plurality, presence of labor and Apgar score were not significant independent predictors of DCP. For NDCP, the only risk factor significant in the multivariate model was PEL/VE (OR = 5.3; 2.2, 12.6).
Among perinatal and postnatal factors, cranial US abnormalities are by far the most powerful predictors of disabling CP in low birth weight infants. Although PEL/VE was the strongest predictor, GM/IVH also appeared to independently contribute to the risk of DCP. NDCP in low birth weight infants appears to have a different risk profile than DCP. In particular, it is less closely related to US evidence of perinatal brain injury.
运用多变量分析技术评估新生儿头颅超声(US)异常与随后发生的脑瘫(CP)之间的关联,根据运动功能障碍程度将脑瘫定义为致残性脑瘫(DCP)或非致残性脑瘫(NDCP)。
前瞻性队列研究。
新生儿脑内出血研究纳入了1105例出生体重501至2000克、具有地理代表性的新生儿样本,并获取了901例幸存者中777例(86%)在两岁时的随访数据。113名儿童(14.6%)有严重到足以将其归类为患有脑瘫的运动表现。其中61名(7.9%)因运动障碍而致残的儿童被归类为患有DCP。其余52名(6.7%)有明确神经学表现(通常为轻度痉挛性双瘫)但无日常生活受影响证据的儿童,被归类为患有NDCP。
在围产期和产后变量的多变量逻辑回归模型中,发现以下因素是DCP的显著危险因素:头颅超声显示的实质回声增强/减弱或脑室扩大(PEL/VE)(比值比[OR]=15.4;7.6,31.1)、生发基质/脑室内出血(GM/IVH)(OR=3.5;1.7,6.9)和机械通气(OR=2.9;1.2,7.1)。基于该模型,93.4%的婴儿被正确分类为是否患有DCP。出生体重、胎龄、住院时间、性别、种族、产次、是否临产及阿氏评分不是DCP的显著独立预测因素。对于NDCP,多变量模型中唯一显著的危险因素是PEL/VE(OR=5.3;2.2,12.6)。
在围产期和产后因素中,头颅超声异常是低出生体重儿致残性脑瘫最有力的预测因素。虽然PEL/VE是最强的预测因素,但GM/IVH似乎也独立增加了DCP的风险。低出生体重儿的NDCP似乎具有与DCP不同的风险特征。特别是,它与围产期脑损伤的超声证据关系较小。