Effect of preterm birth with different causes on cerebral blood perfusion in very preterm infants
10.3760/cma.j.cn113903-20231126-00343
- VernacularTitle:不同原因早产对极早产儿脑血流灌注的影响
- Author:
Qianru XUE
1
;
Ming NIU
;
Huiqing CHENG
;
Changyang MA
;
Meng ZHANG
;
Bin WANG
;
Falin XU
Author Information
1. 郑州大学第三附属医院新生儿科,郑州 450052
- Keywords:
Iatrogenic preterm birth;
Cerebral blood flow;
Magnetic resonance arterial spin labeling imaging technology;
Premature
- From:
Chinese Journal of Perinatal Medicine
2024;27(9):756-761
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To explore the relationship between preterm labor with different causes and cerebral perfusion in different regions of interest in very preterm infants.Methods:This was a prospective cohort study. A total of 145 preterm infants with gestational age of 28-31 +6 weeks who were hospitalized in the Neonatology Department of the Third Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University within 24 h after birth from April 2022 to May 2023 were selected for the study, and were categorized into the iatrogenic preterm labor group ( n=55), spontaneous preterm labor with premature rupture of the membranes (PROM) group ( n=47), and spontaneous preterm labor with intact membranes group ( n=43) according to the cause of preterm labor. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) values in the cortex and deep gray matter of different regions of interest (frontal lobe, temporal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, thalamus, and basal ganglia) were measured using the arterial spin labeling technique in the very preterm infants in each group. One-way analysis of variance, Kruskal-Wallis H test and Bonferroni correction, Chi-square test or Fisher's exact probability method, analysis of covariance, and LSD test were used to compare the differences in CBF among the groups. Results:The differences in the incidence of complications such as cerebral white matter injury, Ⅰ-Ⅱ grade intracranial hemorrhage, and late-onset sepsis during hospitalization among the three groups of preterm infants were not statistically significant (all P>0.05). In the iatrogenic preterm labor group, compared with the spontaneous preterm labor with PROM group, CBF [in units of ml/ (100 g·min)] was higher in regions of interest such as the right temporal lobe [20.5 (16.1-24.6) vs. 17.1 (14.5-23.0)], bilateral parietal lobe [left side: 22.4 (17.1-25.3) vs. 16.9 (14.4-24.1); right side: 23.0 (18.2-27.4) vs. 17.0 (14.0-22.2)], right occipital lobe [22.1 (18.6-29.5) vs. 19.4 (13.7-24.5)], bilateral basal ganglia [left side: 33.0 (29.1-36.3) vs. 24.9 (22.9-33.1); right side: 32.8 (29.0-37.0) vs. 26.1 (22.3-35.0)], and bilateral thalamus [left side: 39.2 (36.0-45.0) vs. 32.6 (25.1-42.2); right side: 38.6 (34.6-44.1) vs. 32.0 (25.4-44.9)] (Bonferroni corrected, all P<0.017). Compared with the spontaneous preterm labor group with intact membranes, CBF in the iatrogenic preterm labor group was higher in the cortex and deep gray matter of regions of interest such as bilateral frontal lobe [left side: 21.4 (18.3-25.3) vs. 17.0 (12.0-22.2); right side: 22.1 (16.7-25.0) vs. 15.9 (12.0-23.3)], temporal lobe [left side: 21.4 (17.0-24.8) vs. 18.4 (14.0-22.0); right side: 20.5 (16.1-24.6) vs. 17.3 (13.3-22.3)], parietal lobe [left side: 22.4 (17.1-25.3) vs. 15.3 (10.4-20.8); right side: 23.0 (18.2-27.4) vs. 15.7 (11.1-23.6)], occipital lobe [left side: 22.7 (18.8-28.4) vs. 18.2 (11.4-23.4); right side: 22.1 (18.6-29.5) vs. 19.6 (14.0-25.8)], basal ganglia [left side: 33.0 (29.1-36.3) vs. 27.7 (19.1-32.4); right side: 32.8 (29.0-37.0) vs. 27.7 (21.5-33.0)] and thalamus [left side: 39.2 (36.0-45.0) vs. 33.9 (26.0-43.7); right side: 38.6 (34.6-44.1) vs. 33.3 (27.8-40.4)] (Bonferroni corrected, all P<0.017). Analysis of covariance revealed that the cause of preterm birth had a significant effect on CBF values in the cortex and deep gray matter of very preterm infants ( P=0.007), and that iatrogenic preterm birth elevated CBF perfusion in the localized cerebral cortex and deep gray matter of very preterm infants as compared to the spontaneous preterm births with PROM group and spontaneous preterm births with intact membranes group (LSD test, all P<0.05). Conclusion:Cerebral blood perfusion in very preterm infants is related to the causes leading to preterm birth, and local cortical and deep gray matter blood perfusion levels in the brain are increased in those with iatrogenic preterm birth compared to spontaneous preterm birth.