Maternal Pyelonephritis as a Potential Cause of Perinatal Periventricular Venous Infarction in Term-Born Children

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Abstract

Introduction: The study was designed to assess the prevalence of pregnancy and delivery associated risk factors in children suffering from neonatal or presumed periventricular venous infarction. Methods: Antenatal records and pregnancy outcome data were retrospectively assessed in children with presumed periventricular venous infarction (n = 43, born ≥36 gestational weeks) or neonatal periventricular venous infarction (n = 86, born <36 gestational weeks) and compared to a matched control group (n = 2168, ≥36 gestational weeks) from a prospective study. Results: Children with presumed periventricular venous infarction had significantly more maternal bacterial infections compared to the control group (47% vs 20%, respectively, P

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Ilves, N., Laugesaar, R., Rull, K., Metsvaht, T., Lintrop, M., Laan, M., … Ilves, P. (2022). Maternal Pyelonephritis as a Potential Cause of Perinatal Periventricular Venous Infarction in Term-Born Children. Journal of Child Neurology, 37(8–9), 677–688. https://doi.org/10.1177/08830738221109340

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