Five-year outcome of infants of birthweight 500 to 1500 grams: relationship with neonatal ultrasound data.

William Kitchen,Geoffrey Ford, Anne Richards,L W Doyle,Elaine Kelly, Laurence Murton

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PERINATOLOGY(1990)

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Abstract
Of 154 consecutive survivors of birthweight 500 to 1500 gm, 139 (90.3%) were seen at 5 years of age, corrected for prematurity, and 137 (89%) were able to be fully assessed by both the psychologist and pediatrician. All but two children had had serial cranial ultrasonography with a linear array real-time scanner in the neonatal period. At 5 years, of 39 children with cerebral ultrasound abnormalities detected during their primary hospitalization, seven (17.9%) had cerebral palsy, but 32 (82.1%) did not. A further three children with cerebral palsy at 5 years had had no cerebral abnormalities on ultrasound. Of the cerebral abnormalities diagnosed by ultrasound, ventricular dilation, with or without cerebroventricular hemorrhage, had the highest positive predictive value (40%) for cerebral palsy at 5 years. In the 127 children free from cerebral palsy at 5 years, two (1.6%) had severe intellectual impairment, both of whom had had normal cerebral ultrasonography. Although neonatal cranial ultrasonography with a linear array was somewhat predictive of cerebral palsy at 5 years, the majority of infants with abnormal scans had no severe sensorineural impairments at 5 years.
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ultrasound
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