Tam EWY, Chau V, Lavoie R, Chakravarty MM, Guo T, Synnes A,
Zwicker J, Grunau R, Miller SP. Neurologic Examination Findings Associated
With Small Cerebellar Volumes After Prematurity. J Child Neurol. 2019 May
21:883073819847925. doi:10.1177/0883073819847925. [Epub ahead of print]
Abstract
To help clinicians understand what to expect from small
cerebellar volumes after prematurity, this study aims to characterize the
specific impacts of small cerebellar volumes on the infant neurologic
examination. A prospective cohort of preterm newborns (<32 weeks'
gestational age) had brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies at term-equivalent
age. Cerebellar volumes were compared with neurologic examination findings in
follow-up, adjusting for severity of intraventricular hemorrhage, white matter
injury, and cerebellar hemorrhage. Deformation-based analyses delineated
regional morphometric differences in the cerebellum associated with these
findings. Of 119 infants with MRI scans, 109 (92%) had follow-up at 19.0±1.7
months corrected age. Smaller cerebellar volume at term was associated with
increased odds of truncal hypotonia, postural instability on standing, and
patellar hyperreflexia ( P < .03). Small cerebellar volume defined as <19
cm3 by 40 weeks was associated with 7.5-fold increased odds of truncal
hypotonia ( P < .001), 8.9-fold odds postural instability ( P < .001), and
9.7-fold odds of patellar hyperreflexia ( P < .001). Voxel-based
deformation-based morphometry showed postural instability associated with
paravermian regions. Small cerebellar volume is associated with specific
abnormalities on neurologic examination by 18 months of age, including truncal
tone, reflexes, and postural stability.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/journal-summaries/preterm-cerebellum-magnetic-resonance-imaging-mri/2019/05/24/7567639?spec=neurology
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