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Structural growth trajectories and rates of change in the first 3 months of infant brain development.

Authors :
Holland, Dominic
Holland, Dominic
Chang, Linda
Ernst, Thomas M
Curran, Megan
Buchthal, Steven D
Alicata, Daniel
Skranes, Jon
Johansen, Heather
Hernandez, Antonette
Yamakawa, Robyn
Kuperman, Joshua M
Dale, Anders M
Holland, Dominic
Holland, Dominic
Chang, Linda
Ernst, Thomas M
Curran, Megan
Buchthal, Steven D
Alicata, Daniel
Skranes, Jon
Johansen, Heather
Hernandez, Antonette
Yamakawa, Robyn
Kuperman, Joshua M
Dale, Anders M
Source :
JAMA neurology; vol 71, iss 10, 1266-1274; 2168-6149
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

ImportanceThe very early postnatal period witnesses extraordinary rates of growth, but structural brain development in this period has largely not been explored longitudinally. Such assessment may be key in detecting and treating the earliest signs of neurodevelopmental disorders.ObjectiveTo assess structural growth trajectories and rates of change in the whole brain and regions of interest in infants during the first 3 months after birth.Design, setting, and participantsSerial structural T1-weighted and/or T2-weighted magnetic resonance images were obtained for 211 time points from 87 healthy term-born or term-equivalent preterm-born infants, aged 2 to 90 days, between October 5, 2007, and June 12, 2013.Main outcomes and measuresWe segmented whole-brain and multiple subcortical regions of interest using a novel application of Bayesian-based methods. We modeled growth and rate of growth trajectories nonparametrically and assessed left-right asymmetries and sexual dimorphisms.ResultsWhole-brain volume at birth was approximately one-third of healthy elderly brain volume, and did not differ significantly between male and female infants (347 388 mm3 and 335 509 mm3, respectively, P = .12). The growth rate was approximately 1%/d, slowing to 0.4%/d by the end of the first 3 months, when the brain reached just more than half of elderly adult brain volume. Overall growth in the first 90 days was 64%. There was a significant age-by-sex effect leading to widening separation in brain sizes with age between male and female infants (with male infants growing faster than females by 200.4 mm3/d, SE = 67.2, P = .003). Longer gestation was associated with larger brain size (2215 mm3/d, SE = 284, P = 4×10-13). The expected brain size of an infant born one week earlier than average was 5% smaller than average; at 90 days it will not have caught up, being 2% smaller than average. The cerebellum grew at the highest rate, more than doubling in 90 days, and the hippocampus grew at the slo

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
JAMA neurology; vol 71, iss 10, 1266-1274; 2168-6149
Notes :
application/pdf, JAMA neurology vol 71, iss 10, 1266-1274 2168-6149
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1287352536
Document Type :
Electronic Resource