Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2022)

Neonatal Neuroimaging in Neonatal Intensive Care Graduates Who Subsequently Develop Cerebral Palsy

  • Malcolm R. Battin,
  • Sîan A. Williams,
  • Anna Mackey,
  • Woroud Alzaher,
  • Alexandra Sorhage,
  • N. Susan Stott

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11071866
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 1866

Abstract

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Cerebral palsy is a common cause of physical disability. The New Zealand Cerebral Palsy Register (NZCPR) was established in 2015 and reports national data. Internationally, an early CP diagnosis has been a focus, with imaging and clinical tools used to enable early accurate detection. Accordingly, guidelines are being developed for New Zealand, including a specific pathway for high-risk neonatal intensive care (NICU) graduates, reflecting the high rate of CP in this group. To inform this work, we reviewed imaging data from a retrospective NICU cohort identified from the NZCPR. In these 140 individuals with CP and a confirmed NICU admission during 2000–2019 inclusive, imaging frequency, modality, and rate of abnormality was determined. Overall, 114 (81.4%) had imaging performed in the NICU, but the frequency and modality used varied by gestational subgroup. For infants born at less than 32 weeks gestation, 53/55 had routine imaging with ultrasound, and IVH was graded as none or mild (grade 1–2) in 35 or severe (grade 3–4) in 18 infants. For the 34 infants born between 32–36 weeks gestation, only 13/19 imaged in the NICU were reported as abnormal. For 51 term-born infants, 41/42 imaged in the NICU with MRI had abnormal results.

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