4.6 Article

Long-term cognitive outcomes in term newborns with watershed injury caused by neonatal encephalopathy

Journal

PEDIATRIC RESEARCH
Volume 92, Issue 2, Pages 505-512

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41390-021-01526-2

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Funding

  1. NIH/NINDS [P50 NS035902, P01 NS082330]
  2. Inje University Research Year Grant [20180187]

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Neonatal watershed (WS) injury is associated with decreased cognitive abilities in adolescents, potentially leading to long-term intellectual challenges. Children with post-neonatal epilepsy and cerebral palsy showed the worst cognitive outcomes.
Background We previously reported that increasing severity of watershed (WS) injury in neonatal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is associated with worse language outcomes in early childhood. In the present study, we investigated the relationship between neonatal injury patterns and cognitive profile in adolescents with neonatal encephalopathy. Methods Term neonates with encephalopathy were prospectively enrolled and imaged using brain MRI from 1999 to 2008. Neonatal brain injury was scored according to the degree of injury in WS and basal ganglia/thalamus (BG/T) areas. The children underwent a neurocognitive assessment and follow-up brain MRI at the age of 10-16 years. The relationship between neonatal brain injury patterns and adolescent cognitive outcomes was assessed. Results In a cohort of 16 children, neonatal MRI showed WS injury in 7, BG/T injury in 2, and normal imaging in 7. Children with WS injury had lower estimated overall cognitive ability than those with normal imaging. Increasing WS injury score was associated with decreasing estimated overall cognitive ability, Perceptual Reasoning Index, and digit span score. Conclusions Children with the WS injury are at an increased risk of having problems in long-term intellectual ability. These cognitive outcomes may underlie early language difficulties seen in children with neonatal WS injury. Impact Adolescents with a history of neonatal encephalopathy and watershed pattern of injury on neonatal brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) had lower overall cognitive ability, perceptual reasoning skills, and auditory working memory than those with normal neonatal imaging. Children with post-neonatal epilepsy and cerebral palsy had the worst cognitive outcomes. Watershed pattern of injury confers high long-term differences in intellectual ability.

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