High prevalence of abnormal motor repertoire at 3 months corrected age in extremely preterm infants

Abstract Aims To compare early motor repertoire between extremely preterm and term-born infants. An association between the motor repertoire and gestational age and birth weight was explored in extremely preterm infants without severe ultrasound abnormalities. Methods In a multicentre study, the ear...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:European journal of paediatric neurology Vol. 20; no. 2; pp. 236 - 242
Main Authors: Fjørtoft, Toril, Evensen, Kari Anne I, Øberg, Gunn Kristin, Songstad, Nils Thomas, Labori, Cathrine, Silberg, Inger Elisabeth, Loennecken, Marianne, Møinichen, Unn Inger, Vågen, Randi, Støen, Ragnhild, Adde, Lars
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 01-03-2016
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Abstract Aims To compare early motor repertoire between extremely preterm and term-born infants. An association between the motor repertoire and gestational age and birth weight was explored in extremely preterm infants without severe ultrasound abnormalities. Methods In a multicentre study, the early motor repertoire of 82 infants born extremely preterm (ELGAN:<28 weeks) and/or with extremely low birth weight (ELBW:<1000 g) and 87 term-born infants were assessed by the “Assessment of Motor Repertoire – 2 to 5 Months” (AMR) which is part of Prechtl's “General Movement Assessment”, at 12 weeks post-term age. Fidgety movements were classified as normal if present and abnormal if absent, sporadic or exaggerated. Concurrent motor repertoire was classified as normal if smooth and fluent and abnormal if monotonous, stiff, jerky and/or predominantly fast or slow. Results Eight-teen ELBW/ELGAN infants had abnormal fidgety movements (8 absent, 7 sporadic and 3 exaggerated fidgety movements) compared with 2 control infants (OR:12.0; 95%CI:2.7–53.4) and 46 ELBW/ELGAN infants had abnormal concurrent motor repertoire compared with 17 control infants (OR:5.3; 95%CI:2.6–10.5). Almost all detailed aspects of the AMR differed between the groups. Results were the same when three infants with severe ultrasound abnormalities were excluded. In the remaining ELBW/ELGAN infants, there was no association between motor repertoire and gestational age or birth weight. Conclusion ELBW/ELGAN infants had poorer quality of early motor repertoire than term-born infants.The findings were not explained by severe abnormalities on neonatal ultrasound scans and were not correlated to the degree of prematurity. The consequences of these abnormal movement patterns remain to be seen in future follow-up studies.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:1090-3798
1532-2130
DOI:10.1016/j.ejpn.2015.12.009