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In critically ill children with severe sepsis, neurophysiologic derangements often proceed undetected and can lead to irreversible brain injury causing neurocognitive and behavioral deficits. The etiology of these impairments is unclear, however, it is likely that some of this neural injury is preventable. The overarching goal for this study is to show that acute acquired structural and microstructural brain injury occurs in critically ill children with severe sepsis, and that this injury is related to neuropsychological deficits and impaired cerebral autoregulation (CAR). Subjects will complete Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging within 2-10 days of recognition of their severe sepsis. Subjects will undergo serial interrogation of CAR for up to 10 days. CAR will be determined by the correlation of arterial blood pressure with middle cerebral artery flow velocity measured by transcranial doppler ultrasonography and cerebral oximetry derived from near-infrared spectroscopy. Subjects will also participate in a neuropsychological evaluation 6 months after enrollment to evaluate multiple domains of behavior and cognition.
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8 participants in 1 patient group
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