2021
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.664706
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Normal Development of Local Neurovascular Interactions and the Diagnostic Value of Resting State Functional MRI in Neurovascular Deficiency Based on the Example of Neonatal Anesthesia Exposure

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…A neonatal MRI should be performed without sedation when the child is fed and swaddled [ 80 ]. In our experience, infants who are less than 2 months old should be submitted to MRI without sedation in order to limit the side effects and avoid a prolonged post-exam observation [ 81 , 82 ]. It has been reported that neonatal sedation might affect the GABAergic systems, inducing learning and behavioral disabilities later in life.…”
Section: Postnatal Follow-upmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A neonatal MRI should be performed without sedation when the child is fed and swaddled [ 80 ]. In our experience, infants who are less than 2 months old should be submitted to MRI without sedation in order to limit the side effects and avoid a prolonged post-exam observation [ 81 , 82 ]. It has been reported that neonatal sedation might affect the GABAergic systems, inducing learning and behavioral disabilities later in life.…”
Section: Postnatal Follow-upmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to the traditional views on neuronal inhibition, GABAergic signaling is also involved in the regulation of cerebral blood flow. We would like to make a particular emphasis on this function because of its potential diagnostic and mechanistic value related to the long-term effects of neonatal anesthesia exposure [ 32 ].…”
Section: Function and Development Of The Gabaergic Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since there are a range of possible severities of E-I imbalance, such that smaller shifts in this balance produce mostly disorders at the behavioral and cognitive level, whereas larger shifts result in neurological symptoms (e.g., seizures), we should first establish the typical level of imbalance accounted for by the delayed effects of neonatal anesthesia. There is a general consensus that profound neurological deficits (for example, epilepsy and cerebellar ataxia which manifest in cases of larger imbalances) are not typically associated with neonatal anesthesia [ 32 , 113 , 157 ]. Therefore, we will mostly discuss mild levels of E-I imbalance.…”
Section: Consequences Of Neonatal Anesthesiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anesthetics that are classified as GABA agonists and glutamate antagonists ( Aksenov et al, 2019 ), have consistently been shown to produce significant neuroapoptosis that is directly correlated with dosage and duration of the anesthesia delivery ( Hadjikhani et al, 2006 ; Zheng et al, 2015 ; Liu et al, 2018 ). Moreover, the severity of apoptosis can create a loss of cortical neurons, of which a significant proportion are GABAergic inhibitory interneurons ( Istaphanous et al, 2013 ), and a further study has shown general anesthesia to directly disturb chloride channels ( Cabrera et al, 2020 ) thereby broadening the known contributory effects of anesthesia on neurodegeneration ( Aksenov, 2021 ). These neurodegenerative and apoptotic processes can alter the delicate excitatory/inhibitory balance of cortical networks ( Aksenov et al, 2020a ).…”
Section: Neurodegeneration and Chloride Channel Deficiencymentioning
confidence: 99%