PRECISION OF ULTRASOUND DIAGNOSIS OF PATHOLOGICALLY VERIFIED LESIONS IN THE BRAINS OF VERY PRETERM INFANTS
- 1 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology
- Vol. 30 (4) , 457-471
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8749.1988.tb04773.x
Abstract
Abnormalities detected by a mechanical sector scanner were compared ''blind'' with autopsy findings in the brains of 56 infants born at less than 33 weeks gestation. Intraventricular hemorrhage was found in 53 of 112 hemispheres and had been accurately diagnosed by ultrasound (sensitivity 91 percent; specificity 81 per cent). Isolated germinal layer hemorrhage was less successfully identified (sensitivity 61 percent: specificity 78 percent); false-positive diagnoses were partly due to difficulty in distinguishing hemorrhage from the normal choroid plexus in extremely preterm infants. Hemorrhagic parenchymal lesions were correctly identified in nine infants (sensitivity 82 percent; specificity 97 percent). Only 11 of 39 hemispheres with histological evidence of hypoxic-ischaemic injury, without marked bleeding, were correctly identified by ultrasound (sensitivity 28 percent), mainly because of failure to detect small areas of periventricular leucomalacia and diffuse gliosis. 10 hemispheres with periventricular echodensities thought to represent leucomalacia showed no histological evidence of hypoxic-ischaemic injury (specificity 86 percent). Ventricular dilatation in seven infants was always associated with evidence of hypoxic-ischaemic injury at autopsy.This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
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