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Neonatal Functional Brain Maturation in the Context of Perioperative Critical Care and Pain Management: A Case Report

Overview
Journal Heliyon
Specialty Social Sciences
Date 2019 Sep 6
PMID 31485532
Citations 8
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Abstract

Introduction: Remarkable plasticity during the first year of life imparts heighted vulnerability of the developing infant brain. Application of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) in infants may contribute to our understanding of neuroplastic changes associated with therapeutic interventions and/or brain insults. In addition to showing clinically relevant incidental brain MRI findings, the objective of our pilot study was to test feasibility of rs-fMRI methods at this early age in the context of pediatric perioperative critical care.

Methods: We report the case of a former 33-week premature infant born with long-gap esophageal atresia that underwent complex perioperative critical care (Foker process) requiring prolonged post-operative sedation and whom presented with incidental subdural hematoma. Rs-fMRI data was acquired (at 1-month corrected age) and (at 2.25-months corrected age) complex perioperative care. We evaluated resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) using graph theory to explore the complex structure of brain networks.

Results: A transient increase in head circumference coincided temporally with lifting of sedation and initiation of sedation drugs weaning, and qualified for hydrocephalus (93%) but not macrocephaly (>95%). RSFC analysis identified networks spatially consistent with those previously described in the literature, with notable pre-post-treatment qualitative differences in correlated and anticorrelated spontaneous brain activity.

Discussion: Current definitions of macrocephaly may require lower threshold criteria for monitoring of critically ill infants. Although we demonstrate that available rs-fMRI could be effectively applied in a critically ill infant in the setting of brain pathology, future group-level studies should investigate RSFC to evaluate maintenance of network homeostasis during development of both healthy and critically ill infants.

Citing Articles

Infant Perioperative Risk Factors and Adverse Brain Findings Following Long-Gap Esophageal Atresia Repair.

Kagan M, Wang J, Pier D, Zurakowski D, Jennings R, Bajic D J Clin Med. 2023; 12(5).

PMID: 36902591 PMC: 10003188. DOI: 10.3390/jcm12051807.


Impact of Infant Thoracic Non-cardiac Perioperative Critical Care on Homotopic-Like Corpus Callosum and Forebrain Sub-regional Volumes.

Kagan M, Mongerson C, Zurakowski D, Bajic D Front Pain Res (Lausanne). 2022; 3:788903.

PMID: 35465294 PMC: 9021551. DOI: 10.3389/fpain.2022.788903.


From the Ground Up: Esophageal Atresia Types, Disease Severity Stratification and Survival Rates at a Single Institution.

Evanovich D, Wang J, Zendejas B, Jennings R, Bajic D Front Surg. 2022; 9:799052.

PMID: 35356503 PMC: 8959439. DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2022.799052.


Infant study of hemispheric asymmetry after long-gap esophageal atresia repair.

Kagan M, Mongerson C, Zurakowski D, Jennings R, Bajic D Ann Clin Transl Neurol. 2021; 8(11):2132-2145.

PMID: 34662511 PMC: 8607454. DOI: 10.1002/acn3.51465.


Head circumference in infants undergoing Foker process for long-gap esophageal atresia repair: Call for attention.

Bajic D, Rudisill S, Jennings R J Pediatr Surg. 2021; 56(9):1564-1569.

PMID: 33722370 PMC: 8362829. DOI: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2021.01.030.


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