Neonatal mortality and encephalopathy
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Transcript Neonatal mortality and encephalopathy
Neonatal mortality and
encephalopathy
JEANIE CHEONG
N E O N A T O L OG I S T
ROYAL WOMEN’S HOSPITAL,
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA
Perinatal mortality related to HIE
Worldwide (Lawn 2010)
5th most common cause of death in children under 5 years
23% per annum since 2000 (≈814,000 deaths in 2008)
New Zealand 2007-2010
14.8% of neonatal deaths attributed to HIE
Neonatal encephalopathy (NE)
Neonatal neurological syndrome
Depressed conscious level
Abnormal tone and power
Feeding difficulties
Seizures
Incidence: 1-6 per 1000 live births
Aetiology: Hypoxia-ischaemia (HIE) in 30-50%
Outcome:
Death (15%)
Severe neurological deficit (25%)
(Badawi 98, Cowan 03, Ferriero 04, Volpe 08)
Diagnostic & Prognostic tools in HIE
Clinical evaluation
Biochemistry
Electrophysiology
Neuroimaging
Clinical evaluation
Diagnosis: History suggestive of
intrapartum insult
Evidence of fetal distress
Cord or early neonatal acidaemia
Deterioration of fetal heart rate pattern
Sentinel intrapartum event
E.g. Uterine rupture, cord prolapse, placental abruption
Depression at birth
Overt early neonatal neurological syndrome
Depressed conscious level
Abnormal tone and power
Feeding difficulties
Seizures
(MacLennan 99, Volpe 08)
Prognosis: Resuscitation
Duration of fetal acidaemia >1 hour
Major resuscitation
6.4 fold in abnormal neurological outcome
Positive pressure ventilation, intubation and CPR in infants
with severe fetal acidaemia
Delayed onset breathing
Time to onset of breathing
Death or severe neurological deficit
9 minutes
42%
20 minutes
88%
(Low 84, Ambalavanan 06, Salhab 04)
Prognosis: Neurologic evaluation
Severity of acute encephalopathy syndrome
Sensitive for mild or severe encephalopathy
Not so for moderate encephalopathy
Seizures
40 fold in adverse sequelae
Prognosis worse if early onset and difficult to control
? Greater injury to the brain
seizure burden associated with Lac/Cho & NAA/Cho
independent of structural changes on MRI
Duration of neurological abnormalities
Low risk if normalisation by 1-2 weeks
(Finer 83, Levene 86, Robertson 93, Dubowitz 98, Miller 02 & 04, Caravale 03)
Prognosis: Other clinical aspects
“Traditional signs of recovery”
Apgar scores
Signs of recovery e.g.
Early establishment of suck feeds
Visual responsiveness
Head growth
have low sensitivity/specificity for predicting neurodisability
(Nelson 81, Mercuri 97, 99 & 00, Stark 06)
Biochemistry
Diagnosis
Most biochemical markers have low
sensitivity & specificity for diagnosis of HIE
Reflect severity of neurological syndrome
E.g.
Glucose, serum lactate, calcium, sodium, pH
Excitatory amino acids & creatine kinase-BB in CSF,
inflammatory markers, brain specific proteins
(research only)
(de Praeter 91, Volpe 08)
Prognosis
Increased risk of death or severe disability
Hypoglycaemia
If glucose <2.2mmol/L in the first 30 minutes
OR ↑ by 18-fold for death or disability
peripheral neutrophil counts in first 96 hrs
High % nucleated RBC/WBC
High lactate in cord blood
(Salhab 04, Morkos 07, Haiju 08)
Electrophysiology
Conventional EEG
Patterns reflect pathological varieties of HIE
Diffuse cortical & thalamic necrosis
discontinuity, burst suppression, voltage
suppression, isoelectric EEG
Periventricular leukomalacia
excessive sharp waves positive vertex or rolandic
Prognosis
Severity & duration of abnormalities
Normalisation within 1 week associated with
favourable outcome
(Wertheim 94, Biagioni 01, Okumura 02, Caravale 03, Murray 06)
Amplitude integrated EEG (aEEG)
aEEG background pattern:
Reflect severity of HI insult
Prognostic in the first 6 hours
Normalisation within 24 hours in 10-50% of abnormal
aEEG
Rapid recovery - good outcome
PPV if combined with clinical evaluation or MRI
Quantitative aEEG-based index (Cerebral health index/b)
Research tool
(Eken 95, Hellstrom-Westas 95, Toet 99, van Rooij 05, de Vries 05, Shalak 03, Leijser 07, Hathi 09)
aEEG in severe HIE
Seizures
Burst suppression
Evoked potentials & NIRS
Visual evoked potentials (VEP) &
somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEP)
Predictive if done within 6 hours
Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS)
Direct measure of cerebral blood flow
Predictive if done in the first few days
Research tool only
(de Vries 91, Taylor 92, Eken 95, Meek 99)
Neuroimaging
Cranial ultrasound
Abnormalities in HIE
Normal (in 50%)
Non-specific cerebral oedema
“Slit-like” ventricles not prognostic (60% controls)
Acute cortical lesions poorly demonstrated
Basal ganglia & thalamic
echogenicity
Haemorrhagic necrosis
High PPV of poor outcome if
persistent
(Babcock 83, Siegel 84, Eken 94, Rutherford 94)
Cranial ultrasound: Doppler
Pourcelot resistive index (RI)
Anterior cerebral artery RI<0.55
Reflects high cerebral blood flow velocity
Indicative of severity
Associated with poor outcome
Predictive within 24-48 hours
Systolic
Diastolic
Doppler: Low RI
(Levene 89, Ilves 04)
Computed tomography (CT)
Patterns of injury in HIE
Diffuse cortical neuronal injury: “reversal sign”
Basal ganglia & thalamic injury: ↓ attenuation
Not sensitive in mild/moderate HI injury
“Reversal” sign
“Isoattenuation” of deep
nuclear grey matter
MR imaging and spectroscopy
Most accurate diagnostic imaging modality
Timing of injury “peripartum”
245 infants with acute NE & intrapartum HI
MRI findings:
80% acute HI lesions
4% antenatal lesions
4% another disorder
16% normal
(Rutherford 04, Cowan 03)
MRI patterns, nature of insult & outcome
MRI pattern of
injury
Nature of insult
Estimated
incidence
Outcome
Basal ganglia &
thalamus
Severe “prolonged” insult 40-80%
Severe cognitive
and motor deficits
Watershed white
matter & cortex
Prolonged “partial”
asphyxia
40-60%
Cognitive deficits
> motor
Basal ganglia,
thalamus,
brainstem
Severe abrupt “total”
asphyxia
10-20%
Mortality 35%
Long term feeding
problems
Cerebral white
matter
Hypoglycaemia, chronic
haemodynamic
instability
15%
Mild cognitive
deficits
(Rutherford 98, Barkovich 98, Cowan 00, Barnett 02, Martinez-Biarge 11, Volpe 12)
MRI: Severe HIE pattern of injury
Day 4 T2-weighted MRI
MRI: Watershed white matter injury
Day 3 Diffusion weighted MRI (DW-MRI)
Proton MRS
Direct measure of brain metabolites
Metabolite profiles not specific to HIE
Reflect severity of insult
Predictive of poor outcome
Lac/Cr, Lac/NAA, Lac/Cho
NAA/Cr
myo-inositol/Cr
(Hanrahan 99, Cheong 06, Maneru 01, Miller 02, Robertson 01, Soul 01, Zarifi 02, Barkovich 06)
Importance of TIMING in interpretation
Conventional T1-W/T2-W imaging
Normal on Day 1, abnormal by 3-4 days
Diffusion imaging
Abnormalities apparent early
“Pseudo-normalise”
Proton MRS
Abnormalities appear early
lactate (tissue necrosis & cell death)
NAA (neuronal & oligodendroglial injury)
Prognostic value of MR biomarkers in HIE
32 studies (n=860)
Sensitivity (95% CI)
Specificity (95% CI)
Conventional MRI
(Day 1-30)
0.91 (0.87-0.94)
0.51 (0.45-0.58)
1H
0.82 (0.74-0.89)
0.95 (0.88-0.99)
MRS in deep nuclear grey
matter (Day 1-30) Lac/NAA **
Late MRI (days 8-30) high sensitivity, low specificity
compared with early MRI (days 1-7)
Posterior limb of the internal capsule (PLIC) sign &
brain water ADC poor discriminatory powers
(Thayyil 10)
Hypothermia & MRI
Study
Day of MRI
Median (IQR)
MRI differences in Prognostic
hypothermia
utility
group
Rutherford 10
(TOBY)
8 (5-11)
• basal ganglia,
thalamus, white
matter, PLIC
abnormalities
Predictive
accuracy 0.84
(cooled) vs 0.81
(normothermia)
6 (3-7)
• white matter &
cortical gray
matter
abnormalities on
T1/T2
• No difference in
DWI
PPV 88% for
T1/T2 & DWI
64 cooled
67 normothermia
Cheong in press
(ICE)
66 cooled
61 normothermia
No effect on
prognostic utility
with hypothermia
MRI/DWI/MRS in HIE
Severe
HIE
Moderate
HIE
Conclusion
Neonatal encephalopathy (esp HIE) is an important
cause of perinatal mortality
Many modalities available in diagnosis & prognosis
of HIE
MRI & MRS have greatly improved & refined our
ability to prognosticate
However....
“No neurodiagnostic technique is
capable of diminishing the importance
of the clinical evaluation of the infant
in assessment of outcome in HIE.
Clinical and specialised diagnostic
approaches are of value only when
used in concert”
(Volpe 08)