Life After Perinatal Stroke

被引:165
作者
Kirton, Adam [1 ]
deVeber, Gabrielle [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calgary, Calgary Pediat Stroke Program, Alberta Childrens Hosp, Res Inst, Calgary, AB, Canada
[2] Univ Toronto, Hosp Sick Children, Childrens Stroke Program, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada
关键词
cerebral palsy; neonatal stroke; outcomes; perinatal stroke; ARTERIAL ISCHEMIC-STROKE; PERIVENTRICULAR VENOUS INFARCTION; CEREBRAL SINOVENOUS THROMBOSIS; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; NEONATAL STROKE; RISK-FACTORS; INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGE; CONGENITAL HEMIPLEGIA; PEDIATRIC STROKE; NEWBORN-INFANTS;
D O I
10.1161/STROKEAHA.113.000739
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Life after perinatal stroke can certainly be good. The high level of functioning attained by many children despite large brain lesions is a remarkable testament to the potential power of developmental plasticity. However, it is clear that such early injury places many other children on an abnormal developmental trajectory with functional consequences. How the interplay of multiple disordered functions in individual children may combine to impact the eventual outcome is of great interest. A child with great developmental potential may be stymied by pathological electrographic brain activity during sleep. Another child highly capable of acquiring new motor skills may fail to gain practical function because proprioceptive deficits prevent him or her from knowing where his or her hand is in space. Another with normal intelligence but an attention disorder may not be able to engage in school, therapy, or sports that could each improve function. With improving recognition and measurement, an integrated understanding of how these multiple factors dictate outcomes in individual children will be a major challenge of perinatal stroke research going forward.
引用
收藏
页码:3265 / 3271
页数:7
相关论文
共 70 条
[1]   Plasticity in the developing brain: intellectual, language and academic functions in children with ischaemic perinatal stroke [J].
Ballantyne, Angela O. ;
Spilkin, Amy M. ;
Hesselink, John ;
Trauner, Doris A. .
BRAIN, 2008, 131 :2975-2985
[2]   Magnetic resonance image correlates of hemiparesis after neonatal and childhood middle cerebral artery stroke [J].
Boardman, JP ;
Ganesan, V ;
Rutherford, MA ;
Saunders, DE ;
Mercuri, E ;
Cowan, F .
PEDIATRICS, 2005, 115 (02) :321-326
[3]   Intracranial hemorrhage in full-term newborns: a hospital-based cohort study [J].
Brouwer, Annemieke J. ;
Groenendaal, Floris ;
Koopman, Corine ;
Nievelstein, Rutger-Jan A. ;
Han, Sen K. ;
de Vries, Linda S. .
NEURORADIOLOGY, 2010, 52 (06) :567-576
[4]   Prediction of outcome in new-born infants with arterial ischaemic stroke using diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging [J].
De Vries, LS ;
Van der Grond, J ;
Van Haastert, IC ;
Groenendaal, F .
NEUROPEDIATRICS, 2005, 36 (01) :12-20
[5]   Cerebral sinovenous thrombosis in children. [J].
deVeber, G ;
Andrew, M ;
Adams, C ;
Bjornson, B ;
Booth, F ;
Buckley, DJ ;
Camfield, CS ;
David, M ;
Humphreys, P ;
Langevin, P ;
MacDonald, EA ;
Gillett, J .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2001, 345 (06) :417-423
[6]  
deVeber G, 2012, FAMILY GUIDE PEDIAT
[7]  
deVeber GA, 2000, ANN NEUROL, V48, P514
[8]   Quantitative Assessment of Limb Position Sense Following Stroke [J].
Dukelow, Sean P. ;
Herter, Troy M. ;
Moore, Kimberly D. ;
Demers, Mary Jo ;
Glasgow, Janice I. ;
Bagg, Stephen D. ;
Norman, Kathleen E. ;
Scott, Stephen H. .
NEUROREHABILITATION AND NEURAL REPAIR, 2010, 24 (02) :178-187
[9]   Cognitive functioning, behavior, and quality of life after stroke in childhood [J].
Everts, Regula ;
Pavlovic, Julia ;
Kaufmann, Franz ;
Uhlenberg, Birgit ;
Seidel, Ulrich ;
Nedeltchev, Krassen ;
Perrig, Walter ;
Steinlin, Maja .
CHILD NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 14 (04) :323-338
[10]   Cerebral sinovenous thrombosis in the neonate [J].
Fitzgerald, KC ;
Williams, LS ;
Garg, BP ;
Carvalho, KS ;
Golomb, MR .
ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY, 2006, 63 (03) :405-409