23 research outputs found

    Motor Outcomes After Neonatal Arterial Ischemic Stroke Related to Early MRI Data in a Prospective Study

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    OBJECTIVE: We aimed to correlate early imaging data with motor outcomes in a large, homogeneous, cohort of infants with neonatal (diagnosed before 29 days of life) arterial ischemic stroke (AIS).METHODS: From a prospective cohort of 100 children with neonatal AIS, we analyzed the MRI studies performed within the 28 first days of life for 80 infants evaluated at 2 years of age. The relationships between infarction location and corticospinal tract (CST) involvement and motor outcomes were studied RESULTS: Seventy-three infarctions involved the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory. Of those, 50 were superficial infarctions, 5 deep infarctions, and 18 mixed infarctions. The CST was involved in 24 cases. Nineteen patients with MCA infarctions (26% [95% confidence interval: 16%–34%]) developed hemiplegia. Mixed infarctions (P < .0001) and CST involvement (P < .0001) were highly predictive of hemiplegia. In contrast, 88% of children with isolated superficial MCA infarctions did not exhibit impairment. CONCLUSIONS: Accurate prediction of motor outcomes can be obtained from early MRI scans after neonatal AIS. The absence of involvement of the CST resulted in normal motor development in 94% of cases. CST involvement resulted in congenital hemiplegia in 66% of cases

    Manual dexterity, but not cerebral palsy, predicts cognitive functioning after neonatal stroke

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    AIM: To disentangle the respective impacts of manual dexterity and cerebral palsy (CP) in cognitive functioning after neonatal arterial ischaemic stroke. METHOD: The population included 60 children (21 females, 39 males) with neonatal arterial ischaemic stroke but not epilepsy. The presence of CP was assessed clinically at the age of 7 years and 2 months (range 6y 11mo-7y 8mo) using the definition of the Surveillance of CP in Europe network. Standardized tests (Nine-Hole Peg Test and Box and Blocks Test) were used to quantify manual (finger and hand respectively) dexterity. General cognitive functioning was evaluated with the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, Fourth Edition. Simple and multiple linear regression models were performed while controlling for socio-economic status, lesion side, and sex. RESULTS: Fifteen children were diagnosed with CP. In simple regression models, both manual dexterity and CP were associated with cognitive functioning (β=0.41 [p=0.002] and β=0.31 [p=0.019] respectively). However, in multiple regression models, manual dexterity was the only associated variable of cognitive functioning, whether or not a child had CP (β=0.35; p=0.007). This result was reproduced in models with other covariables (β=0.31; p=0.017). INTERPRETATION: As observed in typically developing children, manual dexterity is related to cognitive functioning in children having suffered a focal brain insult during the neonatal period. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: Manual dexterity predicts cognitive functioning after neonatal arterial ischaemic stroke. Correlations between manual dexterity and cognitive functioning occur irrespective of sex, lesion side, presence of cerebral palsy, and socio-economic status. Residual motor ability may support cognitive functioning

    Immunohistochemical localization of collagen types I and VI in human skin wounds

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    A total of 74 human skin wounds were investigated and collagen types I and VI were localized in the wound area by immunohistochemistry. Collagen type I appeared in the form of ramifying string-like structures after approximately 5–6 days, but positive reactions in the form of a spot-like staining around isolated fibroblasts also occurred in a skin wound aged 4 days. Collagen VI was detectable after a post-infliction interval of at least 3 days showing a strongly positive reacting network associated with fibroblasts in the wound area. Both collagens appeared almost constantly after a wound age of 6–7 clays and could also be found in wounds aged a few months. Therefore, although a positive reaction for collagen type I in the form of string-like and ramifying structures around wound fibroblasts indicates a wound age of at least 5–6 days, a spot-like positive staining for collagen type I cannot exclude a wound age of at least 4 days. A positive staining for collagen type VI represents a post-infliction time of 3 days or more. The almost constant appearance of these collagen types suggests that negative results in a sufficient number of specimens indicate a wound age of less than 6–7 days, but cannot completely exclude longer post-infliction intervals. Since collagen type I and VI are also found in the granulation/scar tissue of lesions with advanced wound age, the immunohistochemical analysis of these proteins provides no further information for an age determination of older skin wounds

    Quality of life and functional outcome in early school-aged children after neonatal stroke: A prospective cohort study

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    Background Quality of life (QoL) is recognized internationally as an efficient tool for evaluating health interventions. To our knowledge, QoL has not been specifically assessed in children after neonatal arterial ischemic stroke (AIS). Aim To study the QoL of early school-aged children who suffered from neonatal AIS, and QoL correlation to functional outcome. Method We conducted a multicenter prospective cohort study as part of a larger study in full-term newborns with symptomatic AIS. Participating families were sent anonymous QoL questionnaires (QUALIN). Functional outcome was measured using the Wee-FIM scale. Healthy controls in the same age range were recruited in public schools. Their primary caregivers filled in the QUALIN questionnaires anonymously. We used Student\u27s t-test and a rank test to compare patients and controls\u27 QoL and functional outcomes. Results 84 children with neonatal AIS were included. The control group was composed of 74 children, of which ten were later excluded due to chronic conditions. Mean ages and QUALIN median scores did not differ between patients and controls. Median Wee-FIM scores were lower in hemiplegic children than in non-hemiplegic ones (p < 0.001). QoL scores did not seem correlated to functional outcome. Interpretation Those results could support the presence of a “disability paradox” in young children following neonatal AIS

    Obstetrical and neonatal characteristics vary with birthweight in a cohort of 100 term newborns with symptomatic arterial ischemic stroke

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    ObjectivesMany questions remain regarding the mechanism of perinatal stroke. Methods In a series of 100 prospectively enrolled term neonates with symptomatic arterial ischemic stroke, we explored family antecedents, pregnancy and delivery conditions and clinical presenting features and distinguished features of the 50 larger infants with the remainder. Cardiac and cervical arterial imaging were performed in 70 and 51 cases. Results Previous fetal loss, first pregnancy, primiparity, twin-gestation, cesarean and traumatic delivery, neonatal distress, male sex and premature rupture of membranes were statistically more common than in the general population. Normal pregnancy proportion and mean birthweight were in the normal range, arguing against a vasculo-placental origin in the majority. Furthermore, there was an excess of large babies. The larger infants were more subject to suffer from acute perinatal events, with a trend for an excess of neonatal distress (p = 0.065) and for more severe presenting features (p = 0.027), while the lighter were more likely to have experienced longstanding obstetrical risk factors such as complicated pregnancy (p = 0.047) and tobacco exposure (p = 0.028). Cervical MR angiography showed an internal carotid occlusion in two babies, whereas echo-Doppler was always normal; in one case the two methods were discordant. Echocardiography was non-informative. Interpretation The data from this prospective cohort of neonates with stroke confirm that many obstetrical and perinatal factors are risk determinants. They also suggest that birthweight and gender may be biomarkers of two populations of neonates with different pathological mechanisms. MR angiography appears more sensitive than echo-Doppler for the exploration of the neonatal cervical vasculature

    Some Features of the Curvature of a Two-Dimensional Detonation Shock Front at a Simple Refraction Locus

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    We present a theoretical study of the interaction of a constant-velocity two-dimensional detonation wave with its surrounding medium. For the case of pure refraction, we obtain exact expressions for the interface curvatures of the shock fronts in both the explosive (X) and its confinement (C) in terms of the detonation velocity D, the material properties of X and C and, if the flow is cylindrically symmetric, the radius of the explosive charge. These relations are obtained from the constraints imposed on the flow derivatives of the pressure P and the flow turning angle θ by the conservation laws, the boundary conditions at the curved shock fronts and the contact conditions matching P and θ along the interface. This model is used in our numerical analysis of a polytropic explosive with a pressure-dependent decomposition rate and a polytropic confinement. We find that, for a given D, the explosive's interface curvature Cx decreases as the confinement's density increases

    Neurological outcome and risk of recurrence depending on the anterior vs. posterior arterial distribution in children with stroke.

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    International audienceWe report the outcome of 46 previously healthy children with arterial ischemic stroke. After a mean follow-up of 26 months, five (11%) children suffered a recurrence and 28 (61%) were left with sequelae. The prevalence and the severity of the sequelae were similar irrespective of whether the localization of the accident was anterior or posterior. However, a recurrence was significantly more frequent in the posterior than in the anterior group (4/14 vs. 1/32; p=0.025). These observations may lead to the establishment of therapeutic guidelines according to the localization of the infarct

    MR angiography findings in infants with neonatal arterial ischemic stroke in the middle cerebral artery territory: A prospective study using circle of Willis MR angiography

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    International audienceAIM:Neonatal arterial ischemic stroke (NAIS) results from a focal disruption of the blood flow in a cerebral artery by a not well understood mechanism. Our objective is to describe the acute MRangiography (MRA) findings in infants with an NAIS in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory and correlate them with early parenchymal infarcts and motor outcome.METHODS:Among one hundred prospectively followed neonates with NAIS, we studied thirty-seven patients with an MCA infarct explored with circle of Willis MRA. MCA flow characteristics were documented, along with infarct location/extent and motor outcome at age 7 years.RESULTS:Twenty-three (62%) of the children showed arterial changes, all ipsilateral to the NAIS, with occlusion in six, thrombus-type flow defect in nine, and unilateral increased flow in enlarged insular arteries in the remaining eight. There was a statistically significant correlation between parenchymal and arterial MR findings (p=0.0002). A normal MRA had a negative predictive value of 100% (95% CI: 76.8-100) in ruling out a main branch infarct. Patients with abnormal MRA tended to be at increased risk for cerebral palsy (OR=3.1). Occlusion was associated with a worse outcome (p=0.04).INTERPRETATION:MRangiography shows arterial abnormalities suggesting that embolism is a frequent cause of NAIS.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved
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