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  • Title: MRI findings in patients with spastic cerebral palsy. I: Correlation with gestational age at birth.
    Author: Okumura A, Hayakawa F, Kato T, Kuno K, Watanabe K.
    Journal: Dev Med Child Neurol; 1997 Jun; 39(6):363-8. PubMed ID: 9233359.
    Abstract:
    The authors studied MR images of the brain in 152 patients, aged 1 to 19 years (mean 3.3), who had spastic cerebral palsy (CP) and were attending two hospitals in Japan in 1993 and 1994. The relation was studied between the patients' gestational age at birth and their MRI findings, including the severity of periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) seen on MRI. In 119 of these patients, the CP was thought to be due to acquired, destructive brain injury. PVL was seen in 90 and posthemorrhagic porencephaly in 11. These preterm-type brain injuries were observed often in patients who had been born preterm but were also seen in those born at term. Fullterm-type border-zone infarct, bilateral basal ganglia-thalamic lesion, subcortical leukomalacia, and multicystic encephalomalacia were seen in 9, 14, 7, and 3 patients, respectively; these term-type brain injuries were observed only in patients born at or near term. Of the patients with PVL, 90% had been born preterm. Severe PVL was common in the patients whose gestational ages at birth were between 25 and 32 weeks; all patients with PVL who had been born at term had only mild PVL. The authors concluded that MRI findings for patients with spastic CP are closely correlated with gestational age.
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