Abstract
Congenital heart defects (CHD) are responsible for neurodevelopmental delays that were initially attributed to brain injury resulting from cardiac surgery. However, prenatal imaging have shown that brain anomalies are present at birth. The aim of this study was to assess in utero brain injuries before birth in fetuses/neonates with congenital cardiopathies. A complete autopsy evaluation with detailed study of the cardiopathy and neuropathological study was performed in 40 fetuses/neonates. Syndromic congenital cardiopathies were excluded because of the potential other causes of brain injury. The patients were classified into two groups according to their term at death. Statistical analyses indicated the mean brain weight was not significantly different between subjects with different morphological types of congenital cardiopathies. However, the brain weight was at or below the fifth percentile in most third-trimester subjects compared to normal brain weight in second-trimester subjects. Low brain weight in third-trimester subjects was also associated with frequent lesions similar to those described in preterm infants, with a particular involvement of white matter and its components. These observations allowed us to establish the timing and impact of prenatal neuropathological lesions on brain development, and to correlate them with imaging data reported in the literature.
Published Version
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