Abstract
The aim of this study is to clarify the timing of brain injuries in preterm infants
who later developed West syndrome. We assessed the timing of brain insults with serial
EEG recordings beginning immediately after birth in preterm infants less than 33 weeks
of gestational age. The timing of brain insult was assessed by considering EEG findings
in relation to the time of birth. The timing was considered prenatal if an EEG immediately
after birth already showed chronic stage abnormalities, perinatal if it showed acute
stage abnormalities, and postnatal if it was normal and a later EEG showed acute stage
abnormalities. Eleven infants had periventricular leukomalacia and developed West
syndrome. The timing of the brain insult was considered prenatal in 5 infants, perinatal
in 2, postnatal in 2, prenatal plus postnatal in one, perinatal plus postnatal in
one. The infants of less than 29 weeks of gestation were more likely to suffer brain
damage postnatally, whereas those of more than 28 weeks tended to have brain injury
prenatally. The timing of brain injury of preterm infants who later developed West
syndrome is more often prenatal than generally considered.
Key words
West syndrome - Preterm infants - Electroencephalography - Timing of injury
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M.D. Akihisa Okumura
Department of Pediatrics Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine
65 Tsurumai-cho, Showa-ku, Nagoya
Aichi, 466 - 8550
Japan
Email: okumura@med.nagoya-u.ac.jp