4.6 Review

From selective vulnerability to connectivity: insights from newborn brain imaging

Journal

TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES
Volume 32, Issue 9, Pages 496-505

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tins.2009.05.010

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes for Health Research [CHI 151135]
  2. March of Dimes Foundation [5-FY051231]
  3. Michael Smith Foundation
  4. [NS 35902]
  5. [NS40117]

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The ability to image the newborn brain during development has provided new information regarding the effects of injury on brain development at different vulnerable time periods. Studies in animal models of brain injury correlate beautifully with what is now observed in the human newborn. We now know that injury at term primarily results in grey matter injury while injury in the premature brain predominantly results in a pattern of white matter injury, though recent evidence suggests a blurring of this distinction. These injuries affect how the brain matures subsequently and again, imaging has led to new insights that allow us to match function and structure. This review will focus on these patterns of injury that are so crucially determined by age at insult. In addition, this review will highlight how the brain responds to these insults with changes in connectivity that have profound functional consequences.

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