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The height of the pituitary in preterm infants during the first 2 years of life: an MRI study

  • Paediatric Neuroradiology
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Abstract

Pituitary secretory activity is different in premature and full-term infants. The height of the pituitary is a marker of its secretory activity. Our purpose was to use MRI to measure height of the pituitary of premature infants and to compare it with full-term controls. The height was measured on a midline sagittal T1-weighted image in 86 premature infants (gestational age 26–36.9 weeks, mean 32.3±2.85 weeks, corrected age 0.33–2 years, mean 0.76±0.42 years) and in 70 age- and sex-matched full-term controls. The children were was divided into four age groups: A: ≥0.5 years; B: 0.51–1.0 year; C: 1.01–1.5 years; and D: 1.51–2.00 years. The gland was significantly ( P <0.01 ) higher in the preterm infants than in the controls (3.88±0.61 vs 3.31±0.64 mm). In the preterm group no significant difference was found between children small or appropriate for gestational age or between those with and without periventricular leukomalacia. Pituitary height by age group was: A: 3.71±0.57, B: 3.81±0.56, C: 4.09±0.68; and D:4.45±0.57 mm; statistically significant ( P <0.01) differences were found between groups A and D and B and D. The pituitary is thus higher in premature than in full-term controls and shows a trend to increase after the first year of corrected-age life.

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Correspondence to M. I. Argyropoulou.

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Kiortsis, D., Xydis, V., Drougia, A.G. et al. The height of the pituitary in preterm infants during the first 2 years of life: an MRI study. Neuroradiology 46, 224–226 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00234-003-1126-6

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00234-003-1126-6

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