Goplerud J M, Delivoria-Papadopoulos M
Division of Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia.
Clin Perinatol. 1993 Jun;20(2):345-67.
Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy have added significant new information about the newborn brain during and following asphyxia. NMR imaging has permitted sequential in vivo analysis of CNS maturation in the perinatal period that is superior in anatomic resolution, and especially in the characterization of myelination, to either cranial ultrasound or radiographic computed tomography. As a result, the accurate detection and recognition of the brain lesions associated with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy is now possible, including PVL, cerebral infarction, intraparenchymal and intraventricular hemorrhage, and delayed myelination. This has improved our understanding of the associated potential risk for abnormal neuro-developmental outcome with specific lesions. NMR spectroscopy has provided a metabolic window into the biochemical events during and following asphyxia. 31P MRS captures the phosphorous metabolites as levels rise and fall and shift in relation to each other to maintain cellular energy homeostasis in the face of oxygen depletion. Meanwhile, proton NMR spectroscopy promises to sustain the metabolic purview beyond the immediate cellular response to asphyxia to the chronic adaptation phase. Appropriately applied, this noninvasive technology may yet enable us to identify brain injury that is reversible in sufficient time to intervene and to diagnose accurately what is irreversible for timely prognostication. Furthermore, the integration of clinical imaging and spectroscopy capabilities is both feasible and desirable; information provided by each being mutually complementary. Imaging could improve spectroscopy interpretation by identifying the observed tissue, whereas MRS should clarify diagnosis of anatomic lesions detected by MRI. Advances in spatial resolution and speed of data acquisition may soon make integrated MRI/MRS a clinical reality.
核磁共振成像和波谱学为窒息期间及之后的新生儿大脑增添了重要的新信息。核磁共振成像能够对围产期中枢神经系统成熟过程进行连续的体内分析,其解剖分辨率优于头颅超声或X线计算机断层扫描,尤其在髓鞘形成的特征描述方面。因此,现在有可能准确检测和识别与缺氧缺血性脑病相关的脑损伤,包括脑室周围白质软化、脑梗死、脑实质内和脑室内出血以及髓鞘形成延迟。这增进了我们对特定损伤与异常神经发育结局相关潜在风险的理解。核磁共振波谱学为窒息期间及之后的生化事件提供了一个代谢窗口。31P磁共振波谱能够捕捉磷代谢物水平的升降以及它们之间的相互变化,以在缺氧情况下维持细胞能量稳态。与此同时,质子核磁共振波谱有望将代谢视野从对窒息的即时细胞反应扩展到慢性适应阶段。适当地应用这项非侵入性技术,或许能使我们识别出在足够时间内可逆转的脑损伤以便进行干预,并准确诊断出不可逆转的损伤以便及时进行预后评估。此外,将临床成像和波谱学能力整合起来既可行又可取;两者提供的信息相互补充。成像可通过识别所观察的组织来改善波谱学解释,而磁共振波谱应能澄清由磁共振成像检测到的解剖病变的诊断。空间分辨率和数据采集速度的进步可能很快会使磁共振成像/磁共振波谱整合成为临床现实。