MRI scans in
premature infants can predict future developmental delays
St. Louis, August 16: A Washington University pediatrician at St.
Louis Children's Hospital has found that performing MRI scans on
pre-term infants' brains assists dramatically in predicting the babies'
future developmental outcomes.
Terrie E. Inder, M.D., associate professor of pediatrics, of radiology
and of neurology at Washington University School of Medicine in St.
Louis, and pediatric researchers in New Zealand and Australia found that
the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were able to determine
abnormalities in the white matter and gray matter of the brains of very
pre-term infants, those born at 30 weeks or less. Following the infants
from birth to age 2, the researchers were able to grade those
abnormalities to predict the risk of severe cognitive delays,
psychomotor delays, cerebral palsy, or hearing or visual impairments
that may be visible by age 2.
The results of the study appear in the Aug. 17 issue of the New England
Journal of Medicine. The researchers studied 167 preterm infants in New
Zealand and Australia and at St. Louis Children's Hospital. Inder said
the findings are a breakthrough because previous technology -- cranial
ultrasounds -- did not show the abnormalities in the infants' brains.
"With the MRI, now we can understand what's going wrong in the
developing brain when the baby is born early," Inder said. "We can use
the MRI when the baby reaches full-term (40 weeks) to predict
neurodevelopmental outcomes." More than 2 percent of all live births are
infants born before 32 weeks of gestation. Nationwide, the rate of
premature births jumped 13 percent between 1992 and 2002, according to
the March of Dimes. Recent data show that 50 percent of children born
prematurely suffer some neurodevelopmental challenges, such as crawling,
walking upright, running, swinging arms, and other activities that
require coordination and balance. Among pre-term infants who survive, 5
percent to 15 percent have cerebral palsy, severe vision or hearing
impairment or both, and 25 percent to 50 percent have cognitive,
behavioral and social difficulties that require special educational
resources.
The MRI scans show lesions on the infants' brains, as well as which
region of the brain is affected and the severity of the risk for future
developmental delays. For example, if a lesion is in the area of the
brain that controls fine and gross motor skills, the risk is higher that
the child will have some type of developmental delay in movement.
Pediatricians would then know that the child would benefit from
immediate physical therapy, Inder said.
"We can use these results to determine which baby would benefit most
from physical, occupational or speech therapy," Inder said. "We can also
help prepare the parents for future challenges with learning delays and
developmental disabilities."