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SEVERE BIRTH ASPHYXIA AND ABNORMAL CEREBRAL BLOOD-FLOW VELOCITY
Authors:Malcolm I. Levene M.D.  F.R.C.P.  Alan C. Fenton M.B.  M.R.C.P.    David H. Evans Ph.D.  F.Inst.P.    L. N. J. Archer B.Ch.  M.R.C.P.    D. B. Shortland M.B.  M.R.C.P.   Neil A. Gibson M.B.  M.R.C.P.
Affiliation:University Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, General Infirmary of Leeds.
Abstract:Thirty-four fullterm infants with postasphyxial encephalopathy (PAE) were studied with ultrasound to assess cerebral blood-flow velocity (CBFV). A control group of 126 healthy infants also had CBFV recordings during the first week of life. Measurements for the majority of the asphyxiated group fell into two abnormal patterns in relation to the control group: four had low CBFV (less than 2 SD below the mean) and 17 had high CBFV (greater than or equal to 2 SD above the mean); all had severe PAE. Median age at the first high measurement was 26 hours. There were no statistically significant differences between infants with normal and abnormal CBFV in measurements of PaCO2 or mean arterial blood-pressure. A Pourcelot Resistance Index (PRI) less than 0.55 was common in the presence of high CBFV, but never seen with low measurements. 21 of the 34 infants died of their asphyxial insult and four of the survivors have severe cerebral palsy at a median age of two years. Three of the four with low CBFV died, and no infant with CBFV greater than 3 SD survived without severe impairment. The positive predictive value of CBFV measurements less than 2 SD or greater than 3 SD for death or severe impairment is 94 per cent, compared with 83 per cent for low PRI alone. The authors believe that high CBFV is the result of vasoparalysis of cerebral arterioles and that it represents a form of irreversible cerebral injury.
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