Monitoring of cerebral function after severe asphyxia in infancy
(1983) In Archives of Disease in Childhood 58(12). p.997-1002- Abstract
- Thirty nine infants with severe asphyxia (28 affected perinatally and 11 later) were studied by electrophysiological cerebral function monitoring (CFM) for periods varying from a half to 49 days. Nineteen infants died while still in intensive care and two died later from sequelae. Eighteen survived and were followed up when aged between 8 and 36 months. The initial electroencephalogram (EEG) and the first 12 hours of CFM tracing correlated well. The type of background activity, whether continuous or interrupted, proved to be of high prognostic importance unlike the presence of seizure activity, which bore no distinct correlation to outcome in these severely asphyxiated infants.
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1102989
- author
- Bjerre, I ; Hellström-Westas, Lena LU ; Rosén, Ingmar LU and Svenningsen, N
- organization
- publishing date
- 1983
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Archives of Disease in Childhood
- volume
- 58
- issue
- 12
- pages
- 997 - 1002
- publisher
- BMJ Publishing Group
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:6660900
- scopus:0021052571
- ISSN
- 1468-2044
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 78b29ded-f658-444d-9610-e5816cdd60d2 (old id 1102989)
- alternative location
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1628591/
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 15:26:36
- date last changed
- 2021-09-19 04:07:35
@article{78b29ded-f658-444d-9610-e5816cdd60d2, abstract = {{Thirty nine infants with severe asphyxia (28 affected perinatally and 11 later) were studied by electrophysiological cerebral function monitoring (CFM) for periods varying from a half to 49 days. Nineteen infants died while still in intensive care and two died later from sequelae. Eighteen survived and were followed up when aged between 8 and 36 months. The initial electroencephalogram (EEG) and the first 12 hours of CFM tracing correlated well. The type of background activity, whether continuous or interrupted, proved to be of high prognostic importance unlike the presence of seizure activity, which bore no distinct correlation to outcome in these severely asphyxiated infants.}}, author = {{Bjerre, I and Hellström-Westas, Lena and Rosén, Ingmar and Svenningsen, N}}, issn = {{1468-2044}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{12}}, pages = {{997--1002}}, publisher = {{BMJ Publishing Group}}, series = {{Archives of Disease in Childhood}}, title = {{Monitoring of cerebral function after severe asphyxia in infancy}}, url = {{http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1628591/}}, volume = {{58}}, year = {{1983}}, }