PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study examines neurodevelopmental outcomes for children born extremely preterm

2013-04-30
(Press-News.org) Fredrik Serenius, M.D., Ph.D., of Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden, and colleagues conducted a study to assess neurological and developmental outcome in extremely preterm (less than 27 gestational weeks) children at 2.5 years.

"A proactive approach to resuscitation and intensive care of extremely preterm infants has increased survival and lowered the gestational age of viability. There are concerns that increased survival may come at the cost of later neurodevelopmental disability among survivors. Approximately 25 percent of extremely preterm infants born in the 1990s had a major disability at preschool age, such as impaired mental development, cerebral palsy, blindness, or deafness. More recent studies report decreasing, unchanged, or increasing rates of neurodevelopmental disability at preschool age compared with previous decades," according to background information in the article.

The study included extremely preterm infants born in Sweden between 2004 and 2007. Of 707 live-born infants, 491 (69 percent) survived to 2.5 years. Survivors were assessed and compared with control infants who were born at term and matched by sex, ethnicity, and municipality. Assessments ended in February 2010 and comparison estimates were adjusted for demographic differences. Cognitive, language, and motor development were assessed. Clinical examination and parental questionnaires were used for diagnosis of cerebral palsy and visual and hearing impairments. Assessments were made by week of gestational age.

At a median (midpoint) age of 30.5 months, 456 of 491 (94 percent) extremely preterm children were evaluated (41 by chart review only). The researchers found that overall, 42 percent of extremely preterm children had no disability (compared with 78 percent of control participants), 31 percent had mild disability, 16 percent had moderate disability, and 11 percent had severe disability. There was an increase in moderate or severe disabilities with decreasing gestational age. Also, the difference in overall outcome between preterm boys and girls was not statistically significant.

"Improved survival did not translate into increasing disability rates, and we like others believe that the neurodevelopmental outcome for extremely preterm children born in the 2000s will be better than for those born in the 1990s. Nevertheless, the impact of prematurity on neurodevelopmental outcome was large, which calls for further improvements in neonatal care, such as better control of infection and postnatal nutrition," the authors write.

"These results are relevant for clinicians counseling families facing extremely preterm birth." ### (JAMA. 2013;309[17]:1810-1820. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com)

Editor's Note: To contact Fredrik Serenius, M.D., Ph.D., email Fredrik.serenius@kbh.uu.se.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Shedding light on the long shadow of childhood adversity

2013-04-30
Childhood adversity can lead to chronic physical and mental disability in adult life and have an effect on the next generation, underscoring the importance of research, practice and policy in addressing this issue, according to a Viewpoint in the May 1 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on child health. David A. Brent, M.D., of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, Pittsburgh, presented the Viewpoint at a JAMA media briefing. Dr. Brent and co-author Michael Silverstein, M.D., M.P.H., of the Boston University School of ...

Does antimatter fall up or down?

2013-04-30
The atoms that make up ordinary matter fall down, so do antimatter atoms fall up? Do they experience gravity the same way as ordinary atoms, or is there such a thing as antigravity? These questions have long intrigued physicists, says Joel Fajans of the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), because "in the unlikely event that antimatter falls upwards, we'd have to fundamentally revise our view of physics and rethink how the universe works." So far, all the evidence that gravity is the same for matter and antimatter is indirect, ...

Is antimatter anti-gravity?

2013-04-30
Antimatter is strange stuff. It has the opposite electrical charge to normal matter and, when it meets its matter counterpart, the two annihilate in a flash of light. Four University of California, Berkeley, physicists are now asking whether matter and antimatter are also affected differently by gravity. Could antimatter fall upward – that is, exhibit anti-gravity – or fall downward at a different rate than normal matter? Almost everyone, including the physicists, thinks that antimatter will likely fall at the same rate as normal matter, but no one has ever dropped antimatter ...

Graphene's high-speed seesaw

2013-04-30
Writing in Nature Communications, the researchers report the first graphene-based transistor with bistable characteristics, which means that the device can spontaneously switch between two electronic states. Such devices are in great demand as emitters of electromagnetic waves in the high-frequency range between radar and infra-red, relevant for applications such as security systems and medical imaging. Bistability is a common phenomenon – a seesaw-like system has two equivalent states and small perturbations can trigger spontaneous switching between them. The way in ...

Canada's distinctive tuya volcanoes reveal glacial, palaeo-climate secrets

2013-04-30
Deposits left by the eruption of a subglacial volcano, or tuya, 1.8 million years ago could hold the secret to more accurate palaeo-glacial and climate models, according to new research by University of British Columbia geoscientists. The detailed mapping and sampling of the partially eroded Kima' Kho tuya in northern British Columbia, Canada shows that the ancient regional ice sheet through which the volcano erupted was twice as thick as previously estimated. Subglacial eruptions generate distinctive deposits indicating whether they were deposited below or above ...

Genetics Society of America's GENETICS journal highlights for May 2013

2013-04-30
Bethesda, MD—April 30, 2013 – Listed below are the selected highlights for the May 2013 issue of the Genetics Society of America's journal, GENETICS. The May issue is available online at http://www.genetics.org/content/current. Please credit GENETICS, Vol. 194, MAY 2013, Copyright © 2013. Please feel free to forward to colleagues who may be interested in these articles on a wide array of topics including: developmental and behavioral genetics; genome integrity and transmission; genetics of complex traits; cellular genetics; and population and evolutionary genetics. ISSUE ...

Membrane remodeling: Where yoga meets cell biology

2013-04-30
Cells ingest proteins and engulf bacteria by a gymnastic, shape-shifting process called endocytosis. Researchers at the National Institutes of Health revealed how a key protein, dynamin, drives the action. Endocytosis lets cells absorb nutrients, import growth factors, prevent infections and accomplish many other vital tasks. Yet, despite decades of research, scientists don't fully understand this membrane remodeling process. New research reveals, on the real-life scale of nanometers, how individual molecules work together during a single act of endocytosis. "We've ...

U of M research: Mentoring, leadership program key to ending bullying in at-risk teen girls

2013-04-30
New research from experts within the University of Minnesota School of Nursing has found teen girls at high risk for pregnancy reported being significantly less likely to participate in social bullying after participating in an 18-month preventive intervention program. This research, in combination with University of Minnesota School of Nursing research findings from March 2013, demonstrate the preventative intervention program can reduce social bullying among all girls, including those who did and did not have strong family ties. Furthermore, girls in the intervention ...

STOP Obesity Alliance encourages nonprofit hospitals to address obesity via CHB requirements

2013-04-30
Washington, DC, April 30, 2013 – The nation's more than 2,900 nonprofit hospitals are facing new requirements to qualify for federal tax-exempt status under the Affordable Care Act, including producing a Community Health Needs Assessment that identifies local health needs. With obesity affecting more than one-third of adults and 17 percent of children in the United States, the Strategies to Overcome and Prevent (STOP) Obesity Alliance released five research-based, consensus recommendations today to help guide nonprofit hospitals in developing programs that address obesity ...

Maternal diet sets up junk food addiction in babies

2013-04-30
Research from the University of Adelaide suggests that mothers who eat junk food while pregnant have already programmed their babies to be addicted to a high fat, high sugar diet by the time they are weaned. In laboratory studies, the researchers found that a junk food diet during pregnancy and lactation desensitised the normal reward system fuelled by these highly palatable foods. Led by Dr Bev Mühlhäusler, Postdoctoral Fellow in the University's FOODplus Research Centre, this is the first study to show the effects of maternal junk food consumption at such an early ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Deeper sleep is more likely to lead to eureka moments

Hadean-age rocks preserved in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt, Canada

Novel “digital fossil-mining” approach uncovers hidden fossils, revealing squids’ ancient origins

Review: New framework needed to assess complex “cascading” natural hazards

Flipping an evolutionarily disabled switch unlocks ear tissue regeneration in mice

Ancient squids dominated the ocean 100 million years ago

Public attitudes around solar geoengineering become less politically partisan with more familiarity

COVID-19 pandemic significantly eroded American public’s trust in US public health institutions like the CDC, shows longitudinal assessment from 2020-2024

Extreme droughts in LMICs are associated with increased sexual violence against girls and young women

Scientists capture slow-motion earthquake in action

When ideas travel further than people

British ash woodland is evolving resistance to ash dieback

Aileen Anderson named vice chancellor for research at UC Irvine

MD Anderson Research Highlights for June 26, 2025

Optica Quantum June 2025 issue press tip sheet

New study identifies brain networks underlying psychopathy

A nutritional epigenetics study protocol indicates changes in prenatal ultra-processed food intake may reduce lead and mercury exposures to prevent autism and ADHD

Knowledge Unlatched finds a new home with Annual Reviews

Feeling mental exhaustion? These two areas of the brain may control whether people give up or persevere

Genomes from people across modern-day India shed light on 50,000 years of evolutionary history

Muscle in space sheds light on ageing-related muscle loss

Availability of medications for opioid use disorder in opioid treatment programs

Receipt of buprenorphine and naltrexone for opioid use disorder by race and ethnicity and insurance type

Scientists complete the most thorough analysis yet of India's genetic diversity

$50 million raised for UVA's Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology

From hydration layers to nanoarchitectures: Water’s pivotal role in peptide organization on 2D nanomaterials

Discovery of reduced α-synuclein in red blood cells of patients with dementia with lewy bodies

New system uses sound and terahertz waves to measure blood sodium without needles

IEEE study reveal the physics of laser emission from Mamyshev oscillator

CHEST launches critical care APP education and certification

[Press-News.org] Study examines neurodevelopmental outcomes for children born extremely preterm