Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Part I Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, and Pathogenesis of Fetal and Neonatal Brain Injury
- 1 Perinatal asphyxia: an overview
- 2 Mechanisms of brain damage in animal models of hypoxia–ischemia in newborns
- 3 Cellular and molecular biology of perinatal hypoxic–ischemic brain damage
- 4 Fetal responses to asphyxia
- 5 Congenital malformations of the brain
- 6 Prematurity and complications of labor and delivery
- 7 Intrauterine growth retardation (restriction)
- 8 Hemorrhagic lesions of the central nervous system
- Part II Pregnancy, Labor, and Delivery Complications Causing Brain Injury
- Part III Diagnosis of the Infant with Asphyxia
- Part IV Specific Conditions Associated with Fetal and Neonatal Brain Injury
- Part V Management of the Depressed or Neurologically Dysfunctional Neonate
- Part VI Assessing the Outcome of the Asphyxiated Infant
- Index
- Plate section
4 - Fetal responses to asphyxia
from Part I - Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, and Pathogenesis of Fetal and Neonatal Brain Injury
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Part I Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, and Pathogenesis of Fetal and Neonatal Brain Injury
- 1 Perinatal asphyxia: an overview
- 2 Mechanisms of brain damage in animal models of hypoxia–ischemia in newborns
- 3 Cellular and molecular biology of perinatal hypoxic–ischemic brain damage
- 4 Fetal responses to asphyxia
- 5 Congenital malformations of the brain
- 6 Prematurity and complications of labor and delivery
- 7 Intrauterine growth retardation (restriction)
- 8 Hemorrhagic lesions of the central nervous system
- Part II Pregnancy, Labor, and Delivery Complications Causing Brain Injury
- Part III Diagnosis of the Infant with Asphyxia
- Part IV Specific Conditions Associated with Fetal and Neonatal Brain Injury
- Part V Management of the Depressed or Neurologically Dysfunctional Neonate
- Part VI Assessing the Outcome of the Asphyxiated Infant
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
For most of the twentieth century the concept of perinatal brain damage centered around cerebral palsy and intrapartum asphyxia. It is only in the last 20 years that this view has been seriously challenged by clinical and epidemiological studies which have demonstrated that approximately 70–90% or more of cerebral palsy is unrelated to intrapartum events. Many term infants who subsequently develop cerebral palsy are believed to have sustained asphyxial events in midgestation. In some cases, prenatal injury may lead to chronically abnormal heart rate tracings, and impaired ability to adapt to labor which may be confounded with an acute event.
Furthermore, it has become clear that the various abnormal fetal heart rate patterns that have been proposed to be markers for potentially injurious asphyxia are consistently only very weakly predictive for cerebral palsy. Although metabolic acidosis is more strongly associated with outcome, more than half of babies born with severe acidosis (base deficit (BD) >16 mmol/l and pH <7.0) do not develop even mild encephalopathy, while conversely encephalopathy can still occur, although at low frequency, in association with relatively modest acidosis (BD 12–16 mmol/l). These data contrast with the presence of very abnormal fetal heart rate tracings and severe metabolic acidosis in those infants who do develop neonatal encephalopathy.
The key factor underlying all of these observations is the effectiveness of fetal adaptation to asphyxia.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Fetal and Neonatal Brain InjuryMechanisms, Management and the Risks of Practice, pp. 83 - 110Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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