Practice parameter: Neuroimaging of the neonate: [RETIRED]
Report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology and the Practice Committee of the Child Neurology Society
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Abstract
Objective: The authors reviewed available evidence on neonatal neuroimaging strategies for evaluating both very low birth weight preterm infants and encephalopathic term neonates.
Imaging for the preterm neonate: Routine screening cranial ultrasonography (US) should be performed on all infants of <30 weeks’ gestation once between 7 and 14 days of age and should be optimally repeated between 36 and 40 weeks’ postmenstrual age. This strategy detects lesions such as intraventricular hemorrhage, which influences clinical care, and those such as periventricular leukomalacia and low-pressure ventriculomegaly, which provide information about long-term neurodevelopmental outcome. There is insufficient evidence for routine MRI of all very low birth weight preterm infants with abnormal results of cranial US.
Imaging for the term infant: Noncontrast CT should be performed to detect hemorrhagic lesions in the encephalopathic term infant with a history of birth trauma, low hematocrit, or coagulopathy. If CT findings are inconclusive, MRI should be performed between days 2 and 8 to assess the location and extent of injury. The pattern of injury identified with conventional MRI may provide diagnostic and prognostic information for term infants with evidence of encephalopathy. In particular, basal ganglia and thalamic lesions detected by conventional MRI are associated with poor neurodevelopmental outcome. Diffusion-weighted imaging may allow earlier detection of these cerebral injuries.
Recommendations: US plays an established role in the management of preterm neonates of <30 weeks’ gestation. US also provides valuable prognostic information when the infant reaches 40 weeks’ postmenstrual age. For encephalopathic term infants, early CT should be used to exclude hemorrhage; MRI should be performed later in the first postnatal week to establish the pattern of injury and predict neurologic outcome.
RATIONALE FOR RETIREMENT
The 2002 AAN guideline “Practice parameter: Neuroimaging of the neonate” has been retired by the Guideline Development, Dissemination, and Implementation Subcommittee on February 23, 2018, due to this guideline not having been updated or reaffirmed in five years or less after the previous publication or reaffirmation, per the Board of Directors-approved automatic retirement policy, which mandates that all guidelines that fit this criteria will be will be retired automatically unless an update is identified and initiated. The recommendations and conclusions in all retired guidelines are considered no longer valid and no longer supported by the AAN. Retired guidelines will remain available on our website for reference use only. If you would like more information on this guideline or the guideline process, please email guidelines{at}aan.com.
Letters: Rapid online correspondence
- Reply to Letter ot the Editor
- Laura R Ment, Yale University School of Medicinelaura.ment@yale.edu
- Henrietta S. Bada, Patrick Barnes, P. Ellen Grant, Deborah Hirtz, LuAnn Papile, Jennifer Pinto-Martin and Thomas L. Slovis
Submitted August 16, 2002 - Practice parameter: Neuroimaging of the neonate: Report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the
- A James Barkovich, University of California San Franciscojimb@radiology.ucsf.edu
- Steven Miller, Donna Ferriero and Faye Silverstein
Submitted August 16, 2002
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