Maternal or neonatal infection: association with neonatal encephalopathy outcomes - Pediatric Research
Jenster, Meike;Bonifacio, Sonia L.;Ruel, Theodore;Rogers, Elizabeth E.;Tam, Emily W.;Partridge, John Colin;Barkovich, Anthony James;Ferriero, Donna M.;Glass, Hannah C.;Jenster, Meike;Bonifacio, Sonia L.;Ruel, Theodore;Rogers, Elizabeth E.;Tam, Emily W.;Partridge, John Colin;Barkovich, Anthony James;Ferriero, Donna M.;Glass, Hannah C.;
Pediatric research2014Vol. 76pp. 93-99
176
meike2014pediatricmaternal
Abstract
Perinatal infection may potentiate brain injury among children born preterm. The objective of this study was to examine whether maternal and/or neonatal infection are associated with adverse outcomes among term neonates with encephalopathy. This study is a cohort study of 258 term newborns with encephalopathy whose clinical records were examined for signs of maternal infection (chorioamnionitis) and infant infection (sepsis). Multivariate regression was used to assess associations between infection, pattern, and severity of injury on neonatal magnetic resonance imaging, as well as neurodevelopment at 30 mo (neuromotor examination, or Bayley Scales of Infant Development, second edition mental development index