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NeoReviews Vol.7 No.7 2006 e329
© 2006 American Academy of Pediatrics
| The first 300 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
| Introduction |
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The brain of the immature infant initially was imaged using computed tomography (CT) scanning by Papile and colleagues ( 1) from Albuquerque in 1978, and in the following year, Karen Pape, ( 2) a Canadian working in London, described the diagnosis of brain damage in preterm babies scanned with real-time ultrasonography. These and subsequent articles showed that intraventricular hemorrhage occurred commonly in preterm infants, most of the babies who had these lesions survived, and a surprisingly high proportion showed few abnormal clinical signs at the time of the hemorrhage. In 1983, we at the Hammersmith Hospital in London used real-time ultrasonography to diagnose hemorrhagic periventricular leukomalacia with the evolution to cystic degeneration in surviving sick preterm infants. ( 3)
Although these two techniques led to a massive new interest in causation and prevention of brain pathology in preterm infants, both suffered from a number of disadvantages. CT exposed the babies to potentially high levels of X-irradiation and, therefore, could be performed only infrequently. In addition, the baby had to be transported from the intensive care environment to the scanner, which might be situated a considerable distance away. Ultrasonography had
* Professor of Pediatrics and Child Health, University of Leeds, Leeds, England
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