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Abnormal Cortical Development after Premature Birth Shown by Altered Allometric Scaling of Brain Growth

BACKGROUND: We postulated that during ontogenesis cortical surface area and cerebral volume are related by a scaling law whose exponent gives a quantitative measure of cortical development. We used this approach to investigate the hypothesis that premature termination of the intrauterine environment...

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Autores principales: Kapellou, Olga, Counsell, Serena J, Kennea, Nigel, Dyet, Leigh, Saeed, Nadeem, Stark, Jaroslav, Maalouf, Elia, Duggan, Philip, Ajayi-Obe, Morenike, Hajnal, Jo, Allsop, Joanna M, Boardman, James, Rutherford, Mary A, Cowan, Frances, Edwards, A. David
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1523379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16866579
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0030265
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author Kapellou, Olga
Counsell, Serena J
Kennea, Nigel
Dyet, Leigh
Saeed, Nadeem
Stark, Jaroslav
Maalouf, Elia
Duggan, Philip
Ajayi-Obe, Morenike
Hajnal, Jo
Allsop, Joanna M
Boardman, James
Rutherford, Mary A
Cowan, Frances
Edwards, A. David
author_facet Kapellou, Olga
Counsell, Serena J
Kennea, Nigel
Dyet, Leigh
Saeed, Nadeem
Stark, Jaroslav
Maalouf, Elia
Duggan, Philip
Ajayi-Obe, Morenike
Hajnal, Jo
Allsop, Joanna M
Boardman, James
Rutherford, Mary A
Cowan, Frances
Edwards, A. David
author_sort Kapellou, Olga
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: We postulated that during ontogenesis cortical surface area and cerebral volume are related by a scaling law whose exponent gives a quantitative measure of cortical development. We used this approach to investigate the hypothesis that premature termination of the intrauterine environment by preterm birth reduces cortical development in a dose-dependent manner, providing a neural substrate for functional impairment. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We analyzed 274 magnetic resonance images that recorded brain growth from 23 to 48 wk of gestation in 113 extremely preterm infants born at 22 to 29 wk of gestation, 63 of whom underwent neurodevelopmental assessment at a median age of 2 y. Cortical surface area was related to cerebral volume by a scaling law with an exponent of 1.29 (95% confidence interval, 1.25–1.33), which was proportional to later neurodevelopmental impairment. Increasing prematurity and male gender were associated with a lower scaling exponent (p < 0.0001) independent of intrauterine or postnatal somatic growth. CONCLUSIONS: Human brain growth obeys an allometric scaling relation that is disrupted by preterm birth in a dose-dependent, sexually dimorphic fashion that directly parallels the incidence of neurodevelopmental impairments in preterm infants. This result focuses attention on brain growth and cortical development during the weeks following preterm delivery as a neural substrate for neurodevelopmental impairment after premature delivery.
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spelling pubmed-15233792006-09-18 Abnormal Cortical Development after Premature Birth Shown by Altered Allometric Scaling of Brain Growth Kapellou, Olga Counsell, Serena J Kennea, Nigel Dyet, Leigh Saeed, Nadeem Stark, Jaroslav Maalouf, Elia Duggan, Philip Ajayi-Obe, Morenike Hajnal, Jo Allsop, Joanna M Boardman, James Rutherford, Mary A Cowan, Frances Edwards, A. David PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: We postulated that during ontogenesis cortical surface area and cerebral volume are related by a scaling law whose exponent gives a quantitative measure of cortical development. We used this approach to investigate the hypothesis that premature termination of the intrauterine environment by preterm birth reduces cortical development in a dose-dependent manner, providing a neural substrate for functional impairment. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We analyzed 274 magnetic resonance images that recorded brain growth from 23 to 48 wk of gestation in 113 extremely preterm infants born at 22 to 29 wk of gestation, 63 of whom underwent neurodevelopmental assessment at a median age of 2 y. Cortical surface area was related to cerebral volume by a scaling law with an exponent of 1.29 (95% confidence interval, 1.25–1.33), which was proportional to later neurodevelopmental impairment. Increasing prematurity and male gender were associated with a lower scaling exponent (p < 0.0001) independent of intrauterine or postnatal somatic growth. CONCLUSIONS: Human brain growth obeys an allometric scaling relation that is disrupted by preterm birth in a dose-dependent, sexually dimorphic fashion that directly parallels the incidence of neurodevelopmental impairments in preterm infants. This result focuses attention on brain growth and cortical development during the weeks following preterm delivery as a neural substrate for neurodevelopmental impairment after premature delivery. Public Library of Science 2006-08 2006-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC1523379/ /pubmed/16866579 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0030265 Text en © 2006 Kapellou et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kapellou, Olga
Counsell, Serena J
Kennea, Nigel
Dyet, Leigh
Saeed, Nadeem
Stark, Jaroslav
Maalouf, Elia
Duggan, Philip
Ajayi-Obe, Morenike
Hajnal, Jo
Allsop, Joanna M
Boardman, James
Rutherford, Mary A
Cowan, Frances
Edwards, A. David
Abnormal Cortical Development after Premature Birth Shown by Altered Allometric Scaling of Brain Growth
title Abnormal Cortical Development after Premature Birth Shown by Altered Allometric Scaling of Brain Growth
title_full Abnormal Cortical Development after Premature Birth Shown by Altered Allometric Scaling of Brain Growth
title_fullStr Abnormal Cortical Development after Premature Birth Shown by Altered Allometric Scaling of Brain Growth
title_full_unstemmed Abnormal Cortical Development after Premature Birth Shown by Altered Allometric Scaling of Brain Growth
title_short Abnormal Cortical Development after Premature Birth Shown by Altered Allometric Scaling of Brain Growth
title_sort abnormal cortical development after premature birth shown by altered allometric scaling of brain growth
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1523379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16866579
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0030265
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