Cerebellar growth impairment characterizes school-aged children born preterm without perinatal brain lesions

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Infants born preterm are commonly diagnosed with structural brain lesions known to affect long-term neurodevelopment negatively. Yet, the effects of preterm birth on brain development in the absence of intracranial lesions remain to be studied in detail. In this study, we aim to quantify long term consequences of preterm birth on brain development in this specific group. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Neonatal cranial sonography and follow-up T1-weighted MR imaging and DTI were performed to evaluate whether the anatomic characteristics of the cerebrum and cerebellum in a cohort of school-aged children (6 -12 years of age) were related to gestational age at birth in children free of brain lesions in the perinatal period. RESULTS: In the cohort consisting of 36 preterm (28-37 weeks' gestational age) and 66 term-born infants, T1-weighted MR imaging and DTI at 6-12 years revealed a reduction of cerebellar white matter volume (β=0.387, P=.001), altered fractional anisotropy of cerebellar white matter (β=-0.236, P=.02), and a reduction of cerebellar gray and white matter surface area (β=0.337, P=.001;β=0.375, P

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Pieterman, K., White, T. J., Van Den Bosch, G. E., Niessen, W. J., Reiss, I. K. M., Tibboel, D., … Dudink, J. (2018). Cerebellar growth impairment characterizes school-aged children born preterm without perinatal brain lesions. American Journal of Neuroradiology, 39(5), 956–962. https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5589

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