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This project focuses on motor development, muscle growth and muscle activity. Using advanced, instrumented tests such as , the link between muscles and the movement characteristics will be studied. In addition, the evolution of these neuro-biomechanical determinants during the first year of life will be investigated. The examinations are planned for a group of high-risk infants (e.g. premature birth, cases of asphyxia, etc.) compared with a group of infants with typical development.
Full description
Background and rationale:
Prematurity and the associated causes of perinatal brain damage, as well as neonatal stroke and birth asphyxia, are major risk factors for neurodevelopmental disorders appearing from birth. In addition, these neuromotor disorders resulting from impaired brain development appear progressively over the course of the first year, affecting early movement and muscle growth. Therefore, early diagnosis and motor therapy are essential to improve long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes. However, in order to provide adequate strategies for these high-risk infants, it is crucial to identify the determinants of potential neuromotor deficits and their consequences on early motor behavior and developmental trajectory during the first year of life. A multimodal tool is needed to reveal the early neuro-biomechanical determinants of motor behavior in infants at high risk of neurodevelopmental disorders.
Objective(s):
Outcome(s):
Methodology
The current study is a national, single center (Geneva University Hospitals), observational study. This observational research will perform both cross-sectional and longitudinal data collection for cohorts of live-born infants.
The study population for this study will include children, i.e., neonates and infants between the age of 35-36 weeks of gestational age to 12 months of (corrected) age. Further, two main groups of children will be included, (a) typically developing (TD) children and (b) children at high-risk for neurodevelopmental impairments. The TD children will be used as a control group.
Procedure
Multiple study visits are planned for longitudinal data collection within the first year of life, i.e. a time of term age, at 3 months, at 6 months and 12 months of age. For the preterms, the investigators also plan to perform an assessment in the neonatal period, i.e. 35-36 weeks of gestation.
The duration of each visit session will be around 90 minutes per participant, providing also time for feeding moments and adaptation of the infant to the new environment. The visit in the neonatal period will be organized at the Neonatology Unit at HUG (Geneva University Hospitals). All visits from the term (equivalent) age will be organized in the Kinesiology Laboratory at the HUG.
In general, clinical data such as birth information, structural brain MRI and developmental assessments will be derived from the medical records.
The main procedures during each research visit are:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion & exclusion criteria for group of high-risk infants:
Inclusion & exclusion criteria for group of typically developing children:
348 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Stéphane Armand, PhD; Nathalie De Beukelaer, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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