Original articleEight-year school performance and growth of preterm, small for gestational age infants: A comparative study with subjects matched for birth weight or for gestational age1
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Cited by (99)
Visual perception and visual-motor integration in very preterm and/or very low birth weight children: A meta-analysis
2012, Research in Developmental DisabilitiesCitation Excerpt :These findings suggest that the effects of BW on VMI performance reflect effects of accompanying brain abnormalities rather than growth as the explanatory factor for differences in VMI abilities. Alternatively, our finding that BW does not affect VMI performance might be related to the inclusion of children born small for gestational age (SGA) in the studies in our meta-analysis, since studies have shown that SGA status does not impact on VMI outcome (Goyen et al., 1998; Kok et al., 2007; Robertson et al., 1990; Torrioli et al., 2000). The finding that age at assessment was not related to VMI performance suggests that visual-motor integration deficits persist from early childhood into adolescence, in turn suggesting that these deficits arise from early and persisting disruptions in neural connectivity.
Neuromotor development in infants with cerebral palsy investigated by the Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination during the first year of age
2008, European Journal of Paediatric NeurologyCitation Excerpt :In the last 15 years, intensive medical care performed in Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICU) has allowed an increase in the survival of very low birth-weight and extremely premature newborns.1 New risk factors have appeared among infants who previously would have died2,3 and the incidence of neurodevelopment impairments in survivors of NICU is higher than in normal birth-weight newborns.4,5 In particular, due to the high risk of intraventricular haemorrhage (IVH) or periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), an increasing prevalence of cerebral palsy (CP) has occurred in premature, low birth-weight newborns and children born with asphyxia6–9.
Risk Assessment and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes
2005, Avery's Diseases of the NewbornPaediatric consequences of fetal growth restriction
2004, Seminars in Fetal and Neonatal Medicine
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Supported by the Northern and Central Alberta Perinatal Program and the Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.