A Simple Method For Assessment of Gestational Age in Neonates Using Head Circumference

2012 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 211-213
Author(s):  
Dhaval Gandhi ◽  
◽  
Rupesh Masand ◽  
Alok Purohit
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 424-429
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Brandes ◽  
Joseph Itzkovits ◽  
Anat Scher ◽  
Miriam Sarid ◽  
Israel Thaler ◽  
...  

To assess the physical and mental development of infants born after in vitro fertilization (IVF), we performed a general physical and developmental examination (Bayley and Stanford-Binet scales) on a cohort of 116 IVF children, conceived and born at our institution between February 1985 and March 1989, and on 116 non-IVF matched controls. Study and control groups were each composed of 66 singletons, 19 pairs of twins and 4 sets of triplets, whose age at examination ranged from 12 to 45 months. The developmental indices of IVF infants were within the normal range and did not differ from those of their matched controls. The indices were positively correlated to gestational age, birth weight, head circumference at birth and at examination, and mother's education. Mean birth weight, gestational age, and birth weight percentile of IVF infants were lower than the mean of the healthy population. Mean percentiles of weight and length at examination (mean age 22.4 months) were equally low but did not differ from those of the matched controls. However, mean percentiles of head circumference at birth and at examination compare well with the normal mean, both in IVF and control groups. Twins and triplets (IVF and controls) had significantly lower physical and mental indices as compared to singletons.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 130-130
Author(s):  
Evelyn Lipper ◽  
Kwang-sun Lee ◽  
Lawrence M. Gartner ◽  
Bruce Grellong

All of the infants entered into the study were low-birth-weight infants (<2,500 gm). The majority of infants had a gestational age less than 37 completed weeks, and, of these, some were also small for gestational age. Sixteen infants had a gestational age of ≥37 weeks but were included in the study because their birth weight was below the tenth percentile for their gestational age. We agree with Drs Knobloch and Malone's comment about the interrelationship of all three figures: as gastation advances, birth weight and head circumference increase.


Circulation ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 130 (suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas A Miller ◽  
Victor Zak ◽  
Peter Shrader ◽  
Chitra Ravishankar ◽  
Victoria L Pemberton ◽  
...  

Poor somatic growth is common in infants with single ventricle (SV) physiology and has been linked to increased morbidity and impaired neurodevelopment. Asymmetry in somatic growth, a potential brain-sparing adaptation, is important in predicting outcomes in premature and small for gestational age (SGA) infants. Objectives: To assess variability in growth asymmetry and its associations with neurodevelopment in infants with SV. Methods: We analyzed growth asymmetry (weight for age z-score (WAZ) minus head circumference for age z-score (HCAZ)), relative head growth (change in cm/change in kg), HCAZ, and change in HCAZ from baseline to pre-Glenn in subjects prospectively enrolled in the Pediatric Heart Network Infant Single Ventricle (ISV) trial. Associations between these indices and results of the Psychomotor Developmental Index (PDI) and Mental Developmental Index (MDI) of the Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II (BSID) at 14 months were assessed. Results: Of the 230 patients enrolled in ISV, complete biometric data and BSID results were available in 168 (73%). For this cohort, age at enrollment was 21±9 days, age at pre-Glenn was 167±52 days, gestational age was 38.3±1.4 weeks, and 71% were male. Growth asymmetry varied across the cohort at enrollment (0.43 ±1.02, range -2.85 to 4.84) and the pre-Glenn visit (-0.23 ±1.21, range -4.45 to 3.00) as did the relative head growth (2.40±0.86, range 0.50 to 8.00). BSID scores were not associated with indices of growth asymmetry. In univariate analysis, larger pre-Glenn HCAZ correlated with higher MDI (r=0.21, p=0.006) and PDI (r=0.38, p<0.001) and greater increase in HCAZ from enrollment to pre-Glenn was associated with higher PDI (r=0.15, p=0.049). In multivariable modeling adjusting for site, serious adverse events, stage 1 length of stay, and height at 14 months, pre-Glenn HCAZ was an independent predictor of PDI (p=0.03), but not MDI. For each one unit Z-score increase in pre-Glenn HCAZ, the predicted PDI score increased by 2.5 points. Conclusions: In infants with SV, BSID scores were associated with pre-Glenn HCAZ but not with the degree of asymmetric growth. Future studies should explore why asymmetric growth that seems important in premature and SGA infants appears less relevant in infants with SV.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 74-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rowena Korobkin

Rapidly enlarging head circumference is a standard clinical sign of progressive hydrocephalus in an infant. Six neonates 29 to 36 weeks gestational age, with intraventricular hemorrhage, confirmed by ventricular tap, had head circumferences measured at intervals from birth. The sudden appearance of rapidly expanding head size, not associated with changing clinical status, occurred 9 to 20 days after the estimated time of hemorrhage in all of the infants. Air ventriculography within three days of abnormal acceleration of head circumference growth demonstrated moderately to severely dilated ventricles. The ventricles were probably enlarging slowing from the time of hemorrhage because there was no associated clinical deterioration in the infants coincident with the rapid increase in head circumference. After intraventncular hemorrhage, enlarging head circumference appears to be an insensitive sign of hydrocephalus in premature infants.


2012 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rizal Agus Tiansyah ◽  
Irawan Mangunatmadja ◽  
Aman Pulungan

Background Head growth and anterior fontanel (AP) closureare passive processes in response to brain growth. The growthof the brain and skull starts in the third week of intrauterinegestation. roth processes run simultaneously as a part of integralgrowth, along 'With increasing gestational age, until post􀀿birth.Measurement of head circumference (He) and AF in newbornsis done to determine if the brain and skull grew normally duringthe intrauterine period.Objectives To investigate the differences in He and AF sizebetween preterm and full􀀿term infants, and the relationshipbetween gestational age (GA) and birth weight (BW) to Heand AF size.Methods This was a descriptive analytic study on preterm andfull􀀿term newborns. Measurement of HC and AF was conductedin three phases: just after birth, 1x24 and 2x24 hours of age.Analysis of HC and AF size differences between preterm and fullterm subjects was performed, as well as analysis of the correlationbetween GA and BW to HC and AF size.Results Two hundred fifty newborns completed the study. Therewere 180 full􀀿term and 70 preterm subjects. Median HC in full􀀿term and preterm male subjects were 34 cm (range 31􀀿37 cm)and 31 cm (27􀀿34 cm), respectively. Median HC in full􀀿termand preterm female subjects were 33 cm (31􀀿36 cm) and 32 cm(27􀀿3S.S cm), respectively. Median AF in full􀀿term and pretermmale subjects were 2.17 cm (1.0SA.6 cm) and 2.22 cm (1.3SA.Scm), respectively, and in full􀀿term and preterm female subjectswere 2.02 cm (lA.1S cm) and 2.22 cm (0.7SA cm), respectively.The HC of preterms were significantly lower than the fullterms(P<O.OOl), however the AF size was not different between these2 groups of newborns (P =0 .28). Correlation test between GA andBW to HC size revealed a positive correlation (r=0.620, P<O.OO 1and r=0.801, P<O.OOl, respectively), but not to AF size (r=􀀿 0.06,p􀁀 0.279 and F- 0.049, P􀁀0.44, respectively).Concl usions We found that the HC size of pre terms wassignificantly lower than thefullterms, but no significant differences in AF size between the two groups. GA and BW were associatedwith HC size, but not associated to AF size. [paediatr lndones.2012;52:145-51].


2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (suppl 1) ◽  
pp. S7-S15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Sandro Rolland Souza ◽  
Ariani Impieri de Souza ◽  
Silvia de Lourdes Loreto Faquin ◽  
Orlando Gomes dos Santos Neto ◽  
Emanuele Honorato ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives: to describe altered intrauterine ultrasound, analyze fetal head circumference (HC) growth and neonates' outcomes among presumed cases of congenital Zika syndrome in Brazil. Methods: 30 women were included in the study with suspected history of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection during pregnancy and fetal's brain altered on ultrasound diagnosis. Sociodemographic and obstetric characteristics, prenatal altered ultrasounds, HC and other perinatal outcomes have been described. The relation between HC and gestational age was analyzed by using random regression effects based on polynomials fractions. The Z test was calculated to determine an instant variant mean rate of the HC for each gestational age. Results: the mean gestational age of the ultrasound diagnosis was 33.3 + 4.7 weeks and HC at birth was 28.9 + 1.6 cm. The main altered brain ultrasound was microcephaly (96.7%). The analysis of the fetal head circumference showed an estimated increase of the average HC, as to gestational age, it did not occur in a linear form. The instant HC variation rate increased according to gestational age (p<0,001). Conclusions: Fetal's main morphological alteration was microcephaly, observing an increase in the head circumference according to gestational age in a non-linear form and the variation decreased with gestational age.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. 2591-2597 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amer Mahmoud Sindiani ◽  
Rawan Obeidat ◽  
Omar Jbarah ◽  
Ethar Hazaimeh

Objectives This study aimed to determine leptin levels in term newborns who were born in the north of Jordan. We also aimed to investigate the relationships of leptin levels with fetal growth parameters, and to assess the difference in leptin levels according to sex and gestational age. Methods A cross-sectional descriptive study that involved 170 term newborns was conducted. A working sheet for data collection was created for each newborn and included sex, weight, length, head circumference, gestational age, and Apgar score. Blood samples were obtained from the umbilical cord vein of newborns after delivery to measure serum leptin levels. Data are shown as frequency, percentages, means, and standard deviations. Results We found that the mean leptin level was 1.17 ± 0.48 ng/mL. The independent t-test showed that the mean leptin level in boys (0.93 ± 0. 34 ng/mL) was significantly lower than that in girls (1.38 ± 0.47 ng/mL). Pearson’s correlations showed that leptin levels of newborns were positively and significantly correlated with weight, length, and head circumference. Conclusion In Jordanian healthy term newborns, leptin levels correlate with sex and intrauterine growth parameters.


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