Postnatal Laboratory Timers of Antenatal Hypoxemic-Ischemic Brain Damage
OBJECTIVE: Markers were sought to identify the antenatal starting times and rates at which brain damage advanced in children with hypoxemic–ischemic cerebral palsy. STUDY DESIGN: Fetal bradycardia's onset marked the damage's start. Using this baseline, the following were tested as addition...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Perinatology 2005-10, Vol.25 (10), p.664-668 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE:
Markers were sought to identify the antenatal starting times and rates at which brain damage advanced in children with hypoxemic–ischemic cerebral palsy.
STUDY DESIGN:
Fetal bradycardia's onset marked the damage's start. Using this baseline, the following were tested as additional timers of the damage's onset:
serial blood counts of neonates’ normoblasts, platelets, lymphocytes,
differences at birth between base excess values in umbilical arterial and venous bloods,
brain damage patterns.
RESULTS:
Each timer had a broad antenatal time frame within which it could identify specific damage starting times. The broad time frames are as follows:
Blood lymphocyte counts: 0.45 to 13.8 hours before birth, blood normoblast counts: 0.45 to 55.0 hours before birth, blood platelet counts: 0.5 to >72 hours before birth.
Brain damage patterns: 0.4 to >0.7 hour before birth.
Hyperventilating and hyperoxygenating neonates greatly accelerated the damage's advance.
CONCLUSIONS:
Commonly obtained laboratory values and brain images can identify when such brain damage began and the rate at which it advanced. |
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ISSN: | 0743-8346 1476-5543 |
DOI: | 10.1038/sj.jp.7211367 |