Cingulate sulcus development in preterm infants

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Abstract

Cranial ultrasounds performed during the first 3 d of life on 211 infants of 24 to 40 wk gestational age were examined to determiae the in utero development of the cingulate sulcus. The sulcus was identified between 24 and 28 wk of gestational age as fragmented echoes in the region between the thalamus and the anterior fontanels. Over the next several weeks, these fragments coalesced into a single linear echo. Branches then appeared off of the primary cingulate sulcus, increasing in number until a complex pattern of branching was noted near term gestation. This maturations sequence was similar to postnatal cortical development determined from serial ultrasounds performed on 144 infants who were <32 wk of gestational age at birth. The timing of postconceptional cingulate sulcus development was independent of gestational age at birth. However, severe brain insult, defined as intraventricular hemorrhage complicated by ventriculo-megaly or intraparenchymal extension or periventricular leukomalacia, was associated with significant delays in all stages of cingulate sulcus development. Cranial ultrasound examinations in preterm infants allow a noninvasive means of staging qualitative brain development during the early postnatal period. © 1989 International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.

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APA

Slagle, T. A., Oliphant, M., & Gross, S. J. (1989). Cingulate sulcus development in preterm infants. Pediatric Research, 26(6), 598–602. https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-198912000-00016

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