Abstract

Neurodevelopmental impairment rates remain high among extremely preterm and very low birth weight infants. This review describes the rates of brain injury and neuro-developmental impairment at 2,3 years, early school age, adolescence, and young adulthood for survivors with intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH). Former preterm infants with a history of high-grade IVH are at the greatest risk of adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes. There is variability, however, in definitions of brain injury, methods for assessing brain injury, and definitions of adverse outcomes among multicenter networks. Despite differences in methods described in publications, perinatal grade III-IV intraventricular hemorrhage, post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus, and white matter injury are consistently associated with increased rates of adverse motor and cognitive outcomes in the first 2,3 years of life, at early school age, in adolescence and early adulthood. Effects of socioeconomic status on outcomes, however, increase with the increasing age of the child. In summary, although preterm survivors of IVH are at an increased risk of adverse outcomes across a lifetime, there is evidence that social and environmental factors contribute to recovery over time.

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