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The researchers are attempting to improve the cerebral monitoring of extremely low gestational age (ELGA) infants, such that in the future, real-time monitoring will be possible, to aid clinicians in management of these infants. The researchers wish to establish a new NIRS device, diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS), as a safe, noninvasive and informative bedside tool for assessing and monitoring brain health in ELGA infants during the first few days of life. It is hoped that this method will provide detailed information on changes in oxygen consumption and metabolism, and cerebral perfusion. This technique will have wide applicability, but for this research study, the researchers wish to focus on the effect of blood flow instabilities, intermittent hypotension and hypoxic episodes, pressure passive CBF periods, and hypoperfusion on the preterm brain during the first days of life, and the relationship with incidence of intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH). The researchers aim to recruit 100 premature infants to obtain data to:
Full description
Infants born at an extremely low gestational age (<29 weeks GA) (ELGA) are at risk for developing any grade of intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH). In association with IVH, ELGA infants may develop associated neuropathology including periventricular hemorrhagic infarction, post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus and periventricular leukomalacia. Long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes depend on the severity of the hemorrhage. High-grade IVH (grade III or IV) is associated with a 50% risk for cerebral palsy and significant intellectual disability. Such disabilities have devastating and lifelong impact on affected children, the children's families and society. In more than 90% of the cases, IVH in ELGA infants occurs during the first three postnatal days. The major risk factor for IVH is the gestational age of the infant with greater immaturity being associated with the highest risk. The degree of prematurity of the infant relates to the immaturity of the vascular bed within the germinal matrix as well as challenges in the regulation of the cerebrovascular circulation. Specifically, increases, decreases and significant fluctuations in cerebral blood flow (CBF) have been shown to play important pathogenic roles in IVH. These CBF instabilities have been related to the mechanics of ventilation as well as to the severity of the infant's illness, with contributing factors of hypercarbia, hypovolemia, hypotension, restlessness, patent ductus arteriosus, and relatively high inspired oxygen concentrations. Another major contributing factor to CBF instabilities is the pressure-passive cerebral circulatory state in the unstable ELGA infants. To prevent such deleterious consequences on the developing brain of preterm infants, optimal therapeutic strategies that maintain both cardiopulmonary function and cerebrovascular stability need to be developed. The major obstacle impeding effective brain-oriented neonatal intensive care is the lack of a relevant bedside continuous monitor of cerebral blood flow.
Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is a non-invasive, non-ionizing method for monitoring and imaging of brain hemodynamics. Commercially available, FDA-approved NIRS systems provide hemoglobin concentration changes and relative hemoglobin oxygen saturation (rSO2) as a surrogate for cerebral perfusion and oxygen consumption. However currently there are no commercially available monitors, which can directly assess cerebral perfusion and oxygen consumption in preterm infants. The researchers are investigating the possibility of using a novel NIRS optical method to quantify cerebral perfusion, continuously, at the bedside in the NICU preterm population. The researchers believe the use of Diffuse Correlation Spectroscopy (DCS) as a stand-alone and in combination with frequency-domain (FD) or continuous wave (CW) NIRS will offer more robust diagnostic capabilities by directly quantifying cerebral blood flow (CBF), and cerebral oxygen metabolism (CMRO2). The researcher's preliminary efforts in animals and humans with this optical device show the potential of the technique.
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100 participants in 1 patient group
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Maria A Franceschini, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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