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Altered Cerebral Blood Flow Patterns Point to Preemies' Brain Injuries

Non-invasive imaging technique provides an earlier glimpse of cerebral perfusion abnormalities

CHICAGO – Global and regional blood flow to the immature brain is disturbed by preterm birth, hemodynamic instability, and subsequent brain injury, a Children’s National Health System research team reports for the first time. 

Preterm birth is a major risk factor for brain injury. While blood flow to the brain has been studied for other health conditions, the research team wanted to explore changes in perfusion, blood flow to the brain, in preemies. The prospective study examined infants weighing less than 1,500 grams who were born prior to 32 gestational weeks.

Of 78 infants studied, 47 had structural brain injuries categorized as either mild or moderate to severe, and 31 had no brain injury. While global cerebral blood flow decreased with advancing postnatal age, the blood flow decreased more significantly among preterm infants with brain injury, says Eman S. Mahdi, MD, MBChB. Dr. Mahdi is a Pediatric Radiology Fellow at Children’s National and lead author of the abstract.

“In addition to differences in global brain blood flow, we saw a marked decrease in regional blood flow to the thalamus and the pons, regions known to be metabolically active during this time,” Dr. Mahdi says. The thalamus helps to process information from the senses and relays it elsewhere within the brain. Located at the base of the brain, the pons is part of the central nervous system and also is a critical relay of information between the cerebrum and cerebellum. “These regional variations in blood flow reflect vulnerability of the cerebral-cerebellar circuitry,” she adds.

The Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) recognized Dr. Mahdi with its Trainee Research Prize. She presented the work, “Cerebral Perfusion Is Perturbed by Preterm Birth and Brain Injury,” during the RSNA Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting, held from Nov. 27 to Dec. 2.

The findings point to the need for additional research to explore how cerebral blood flow trends evolve as preemies grow older and whether abnormal blood flow is linked to differences in health outcomes. In addition, the technique used by the research team, arterial spin labeling perfusion imaging – a type of magnetic resonance imaging – represents a useful and non-invasive technology for identifying early cerebral perfusion abnormalities in preterm infants, says Catherine Limperopoulos, PhD, director of the Developing Brain Research Laboratory at Children’s National and abstract senior author.

Contact: Diedtra Henderson | Children’s National Health System | c: 443-610-9826/ o: 202-476-4500 | dhenderso2@childrensnational.org