4.6 Article

The relationship between placental and other perinatal risk factors for neurologic impairment in very low birth weight children

Journal

PEDIATRIC RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue 6, Pages 721-726

Publisher

INT PEDIATRIC RESEARCH FOUNDATION, INC
DOI: 10.1203/00006450-200006000-00007

Keywords

-

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Placental abnormalities reflect antenatal disease processes that may interact with other perinatal risk factors to affect long-term outcome. We performed a nested case control analysis of placental and clinical risk factors associated with neurologic impairment (NI) at 20-mo corrected age (60 cases and 59 controls) using data collected in a prospective study of very low birth weight (less than 1500 g) infants born between 1983 and 1991. In a preliminary analysis we explored the relationship between clinical infection and histologic chorioamnionitis (CA). Only histologic CA with a fetal vascular response correlated with either clinical CA or early onset neonatal sepsis, We then assessed the relative contribution of the nine risk factors (four placental and five clinical) associated with NI at the univariate level by multiple logistic regression. Three risk factors were independent predictors of NI: severe cranial ultrasound abnormalities (odds ratio 13.6, 95% confidence intervals 4.5-66.7), multiple placental lesions (odds ratio 13.2, 95% confidence intervals 1.3-137.0), and oxygen dependence at 36 wk (odds ratio 4.2, 95% confidence intervals 1.2-14.6). Finally, a series of logistic regressions was conducted with the dependent variable changing as we-moved back along the causal chain to explore the relationships between risk factors operating at different stages. This analysis suggested that antenatal variables that were not independent predictors of NI by multiple logistic regression exerted their effects through the following intermediate pathways: fetal grade 3 histologic CA via chorionic vessel thrombi, clinical CA via grade 3 villous edema, and grade 3 villous edema via severe cranial ultrasound abnormalities.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available