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Brain growth in fetuses with congenital diaphragmatic hernia

Fedel Machado‐Rivas, Jungwhan John Choi, Maria A. Bedoya, Lina M. Acosta‐Buitrago, Clemente Velasco‐Annis, Onur Afacan, Carol E. Barnewolt, Judy A. Estroff, Simon K. Warfield, Ali Gholipour, Camilo Jaimes

2023Journal of Neuroimaging14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: To perform a volumetric evaluation of the brain in fetuses with right or left congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH), and to compare brain growth trajectories to normal fetuses. METHODS: We identified fetal MRIs performed between 2015 and 2020 in fetuses with a diagnosis of CDH. Gestational age (GA) range was 19-40 weeks. Control subjects consisted of normally developing fetuses between 19 and 40 weeks recruited for a separate prospective study. All images were acquired at 3 Tesla and were processed with retrospective motion correction and slice-to-volume reconstruction to generate super-resolution 3-dimensional volumes. These volumes were registered to a common atlas space and segmented in 29 anatomic parcellations. RESULTS: A total of 174 fetal MRIs in 149 fetuses were analyzed (99 controls [mean GA: 29.2 ± 5.2 weeks], 34 fetuses left-sided CDH [mean GA: 28.4 ± 5.3 weeks], and 16 fetuses right-sided CDH [mean GA: 27 ± 5.4 weeks]). In fetuses with left-sided CDH, brain parenchymal volume was -8.0% (95% confidence interval [CI] [-13.1, -2.5]; p = .005) lower than normal controls. Differences ranged from -11.4% (95% CI [-18, -4.3]; p < .001) in the corpus callosum to -4.6% (95% CI [-8.9, -0.1]; p = .044) in the hippocampus. In fetuses with right-sided CDH, brain parenchymal volume was -10.1% (95% CI [-16.8, -2.7]; p = .008) lower than controls. Differences ranged from -14.1% (95% CI [-21, -6.5]; p < .001) in the ventricular zone to -5.6% (95% CI [-9.3, -1.8]; p = .025) in the brainstem. CONCLUSION: Left and right CDH are associated with lower fetal brain volumes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCongenital diaphragmatic herniaFetusGestational ageDiaphragmatic herniaConfidence intervalDiaphragmatic breathingCorpus callosumNuclear medicinePregnancyAnatomyHerniaSurgeryInternal medicinePathologyBiologyAlternative medicineGeneticsCongenital Diaphragmatic Hernia StudiesNeonatal and fetal brain pathologyFetal and Pediatric Neurological Disorders
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