Cerebral artery Doppler ultrasonography for prediction of outcome after perinatal asphyxia

Perinatal asphyxia is the most common cause of neurologic injury and neurodevelopmental delay. The signs of injury are nonspecific at birth, and most indicators take hours to days before they become manifest. Early recognition of the injury is important in guiding management during those critical fi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of ultrasound in medicine Vol. 13; no. 8; p. 595
Main Authors Stark, J E, Seibert, J J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 01.08.1994
Subjects
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Perinatal asphyxia is the most common cause of neurologic injury and neurodevelopmental delay. The signs of injury are nonspecific at birth, and most indicators take hours to days before they become manifest. Early recognition of the injury is important in guiding management during those critical first days of life. Over a five-year period, we investigated 16 term neonates with a history of asphyxia on the first day of life who demonstrated on intracranial Doppler sonography cerebral vessel high diastolic flow with a resistive index below 60. Two infants died and one was lost to follow-up. Three of the remaining 13 patients were normal at 8 months to 1 year follow-up. The remaining 10 patients had severe neurodevelopmental delay with profound handicaps at follow-up periods from 3 months to 32 months. This study has confirmed earlier reports that in the first days of life, a very low resistive index combined with history of asphyxia is associated with an adverse outcome and may be considered one of the earliest markers for poor neurodevelopmental outcome. Only 50% of these patients demonstrated abnormal sonographic imaging.
ISSN:0278-4297
1550-9613
DOI:10.7863/jum.1994.13.8.595