If the lesions reported in this study indicate cerebrovascular disease, subclinical disease may be more prevalent than clinical disease, and the prevalence of disease may rise with age. Also, infarctlike lesions have a distinctive anatomic profile.
This study examined in a regional cohort of 66 term age very low birth weight infants, the relationship between qualitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures of cerebral white and gray matter abnormalities and infant neurobehavioral functioning assessed by structured neurological examination. The diagnostic utility of the Dubowitz neonatal neurological examination in identifying children with severe cerebral abnormalities was also evaluated. Examination results revealed the presence of high rates of neurological abnormality, with 60% of infants scoring in the suboptimal range relative to infants born full term. Linear associations were found between the severity of structural cerebral abnormality on MRI and the quality of clinically rated infant neurobehavioral functioning, with increasing abnormalities being significantly associated with poorer neurological functioning. In particular, white matter abnormalities were significantly associated with lower mean tone and tone pattern scores and a tendency toward lower mean reflex scores. Gray matter abnormalities were significantly associated with lower tone and tone pattern scores and a tendency toward lower spontaneous movements and orientation/behavior scores. Finally, the Dubowitz Neonatal Neurological Examination was found to have relatively good sensitivity (88%; negative predictive value, 92%) but poor specificity (46%; positive predictive value, 34%) for identifying children with significant MRI abnormalities. Implications of these findings for the neurological evaluation of the very low birth weight infant are discussed.
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