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Abstract

Profound asphyxia in the premature infant: imaging findings.

A J Barkovich and S K Sargent
American Journal of Neuroradiology October 1995, 16 (9) 1837-1846;
A J Barkovich
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S K Sargent
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Abstract

PURPOSE To investigate imaging findings in premature infants who had profound asphyxia.

METHODS CT (three patients), MR (three patients), and ultrasonography (four patients) studies of five patients who had profound asphyxia before the postconceptional age of 32 weeks were retrospectively reviewed. The patients ranged from 1 day to 4 months old at the time of the imaging studies. An autopsy report was available in one patient. The results were compared with reports in the literature of patients with similar injuries at similar ages.

RESULTS Abnormalities of the thalami and basal ganglia were present in all infants examined with CT or MR. CT showed low attenuation in the basal ganglia and high attenuation (blood or calcium) in the thalami; thalamic cavitation and low attenuation of the upper brain stem were present in one infant. MR showed T1 and T2 shortening in the thalami in all patients. Variable MR changes were noted in the basal ganglia, ranging from diminished size with normal signal intensity to T1 and T2 shortening with normal size and complete cavitation. T1 and T2 shortening were seen in the dorsal brain stem in one patient. Sonography showed transient or persistent hyperechogenicity in the thalami in three patients and cavitation of the thalami in one patient. Damage to the perirolandic cortex was not present in any patient.

CONCLUSION Profound asphyxia before 32 weeks gestational age shows consistent injury to the thalami, basal ganglia, and brain stem that can be detected by all three imaging modalities. The pattern of injury seems to differ from that of partial asphyxia in premature infants and of profound asphyxia in term infants.

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American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 16, Issue 9
1 Oct 1995
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Profound asphyxia in the premature infant: imaging findings.
A J Barkovich, S K Sargent
American Journal of Neuroradiology Oct 1995, 16 (9) 1837-1846;

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Profound asphyxia in the premature infant: imaging findings.
A J Barkovich, S K Sargent
American Journal of Neuroradiology Oct 1995, 16 (9) 1837-1846;
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  • Patterns of brain injury and outcome in term neonates presenting with postnatal collapse
  • Movement Training Advances the Emergence of Reaching in Infants Born at Less Than 33 Weeks of Gestational Age: A Randomized Clinical Trial
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  • Regional Brain Volumes and Their Later Neurodevelopmental Correlates in Term and Preterm Infants
  • Proton Spectroscopy and Diffusion Imaging on the First Day of Life after Perinatal Asphyxia: Preliminary Report
  • Early MR Features of Hypoxic-ischemic Brain Injury in Neonates with Periventricular Densities on Sonograms
  • In Re: Barkovich AJ.MR and CT evaluation of profound neonatal and infantile asphyxia.AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 1992;13:959-972
  • PEDIATRIC NEURORADIOLOGY
  • Relationship between MR Imaging and Histopathologic Findings of the Brain in Extremely Sick Preterm Infants
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