Delayed Surgical Closure of the Patent Ductus Arteriosus: Does the Brain Pay the Price? - 14/03/23
Abstract |
Objective |
To investigate the relation between duration of hemodynamically significant patent ductus arteriosus (PDA), cerebral oxygenation, magnetic resonance imaging–determined brain growth, and 2-year neurodevelopmental outcome in a cohort of infants born preterm whose duct was closed surgically.
Study design |
Infants born preterm at <30 weeks of gestational age who underwent surgical ductal closure between 2008 and 2018 (n = 106) were included in this observational study. Near infrared spectroscopy–monitored cerebral oxygen saturation during and up to 24 hours after ductal closure and a Bayley III developmental test at the corrected age of 2 years is the institutional standard of care for this patient group. Infants also had magnetic resonance imaging at term-equivalent age.
Results |
In total, 90 infants fulfilled the inclusion criteria (median [range]: 25.9 weeks [24.0-28.9]; 856 g [540-1350]. Days of a PDA ranged from 1 to 41. Multivariable linear regression analysis showed that duration of a PDA negatively influenced cerebellar growth and motor and cognitive outcome at 2 years of corrected age.
Conclusions |
Prolonged duration of a PDA in this surgical cohort is associated with reduced cerebellar growth and suboptimal neurodevelopmental outcome.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Abbreviations : Cer-vol, Cogn-score, hsPDA, MLR, Mot-score, MRI, NEC, NICU, PDA, PIVH, PLCS, PLDcort, rScO2, SaO2, SLR
Plan
The authors declare no conflict of interest. |
Vol 254
P. 25-32 - mars 2023 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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