Neuropediatrics 1997; 28(5): 272-275
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-973713
Original articles

© Hippokrates Verlag GmbH Stuttgart

Disorganized Patterns: Chronic-Stage EEG Abnormality of the Late Neonatal Period Following Severely Depressed EEG Activities in Early Preterm Infants

F. Hayakawa1 , A. Okumura1 , T. Kato1 , K. Kuno1 , K. Watanabe2
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, Anjo Kosei Hospital, Nagoya University School of Medicine, Japan
  • 2Department of Pediatrics, Nagoya University School of Medicine, Japan
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
13 March 2007 (online)

Abstract

EEC recordings were performed within 72 hours following the birth of 55 preterm infants with a gestational age of less than 29 weeks. Seventeen infants (31 %) manifested moderately to severely depressed EEG activities during this period. Eight of the infants died within a few days after birth, and 9 survived. We recorded EECs from the surviving infants serially throughout the neonatal period, and evaluated EEC findings in the recovery phase following depressed EEC activities.

At 1 to 3 weeks after birth, EECs revealed an abnormal morphology of background activities in 8 of 9 cases; this was also true of the EECs of 6 cases at 4 weeks or more of postnatal age. The latter 6 cases demonstrated deep white matter injury on cranial ultrasonography, and all of them later developed cerebral palsy.

Based on the foregoing, EEC findings of early preterm infants in the late neonatal period are considered a useful means to detect deep white-matter injury and to allow neurological prognosis.