DEVELOPMENTAL OUTCOME OF PRETERM INFANTS WITH TRANSIENT NEUROMOTOR ABNORMALITIES

Citation
Db. Deugenio et al., DEVELOPMENTAL OUTCOME OF PRETERM INFANTS WITH TRANSIENT NEUROMOTOR ABNORMALITIES, American journal of diseases of children [1960], 147(5), 1993, pp. 570-574
Citations number
17
Categorie Soggetti
Pediatrics
Journal title
American journal of diseases of children [1960]
ISSN journal
0002922X → ACNP
Volume
147
Issue
5
Year of publication
1993
Pages
570 - 574
Database
ISI
SICI code
Abstract
Objective.-To determine the relationship between transiently abnormal neurologic findings in preterm infants and subsequent cognitive outcom e at 4 years of age. Design.-Prospective 4-year follow-up. Setting.-Re gional perinatal center in Syracuse, NY. Participants.-One hundred thi rty-one of 135 consecutively born infants of no more than 32 weeks of gestational age; 98% followed up from birth to 4 years of age. Interve ntions.-None. Measurements and Main Results.-Based on neuromotor evalu ations performed at 6 and 15 months of age, two groups of infants were identified. One group had abnormal neurologic findings at 6 months of age that had resolved by 15 months of age (transiently abnormal group ). The other group had normal neuromotor findings at both 6 and 15 mon ths of age (normal group). The transiently abnormal group had signific antly poorer scores on the Bayley Mental scale at 6 months of age (90/-15 vs 108+/-10; P<.001), 15 months (91+/-21 vs 105+/-12; P<.001), an d 24 months (91+/-19 vs 101+/-17; P<.001). However, at 4 years of age, cognitive performance on the McCarthy Scales was similar for the tran siently abnormal 'and normal groups (General Cognitive index, 93+/-13 and 95+/-14, respectively). The incidence of poor cognitive outcome (C ognitive index <84) decreased from 39% at 2 years of age to 18% at 4 y ears of age in the group with a history of transient neurologic abnorm alities but remained unchanged (16% to 18%) in the normal group. Concl usion.-Early neurologic abnormalities that are transient did not predi ct cognitive delays at 4 years of age in preterm infants.