Does the Onset of Neonatal Seizures Correlate with the Timing of Fetal Neurologic Injury?
1998; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 37; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1177/000992289803701105
ISSN1938-2707
AutoresMyoung Ock Ahn, Lisa M. Korst, Jeffrey P. Phelan, Gilbert I. Martin,
Tópico(s)Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
ResumoThe onset of seizures after birth has been considered evidence of an intrapartum asphyx-ial event. The present study was undertaken to determine whether the timing of neonatal seizures after birth correlated with the timing of a fetal asphyxial event. Thus, singleton term infants diagnosed with hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy and permanent brain injury had a mean birth to seizure onset interval of 9.8 ± 17.7 (range 1-90) hours. When these infants were categorized according to their fetal heart rate (FHR) patterns, the acute group (normal FHR followed by a sudden prolonged FHR deceleration that continued until delivery) tended to have earlier seizures than infants did within the tachycardia group (normal FHR followed by tachycardia, repetitive decelerations, and diminished variability) and the preadmission group (persistent nonreactive FHR pattern intrapartum). These seizure intervals were as follows: acute, 6.6 ± 18.0 (range 1-90) hours; tachycardia, 11.1 +17.1 (range 1-61) hours; and preadmission, 11.8 +17.9 (range 1-79) hours (p<0.05). But the range varied widely and no group was categorically distinct. In conclusion, the onset of neonatal seizures after birth does not, in and of itself, appear to be a reliable indicator of the timing of fetal neurologic injury.
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