Sex differences in outcome and associations with neonatal brain morphology in extremely preterm children.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Brigitte Vollmer | Nelly Padilla | U. Ådén | M. Blennow | N. Padilla | B. Skiöld | B. Vollmer | Mats Blennow | Béatrice Skiöld | Georgios Alexandrou | Ulrika Adén | Georgios Alexandrou
[1] Pia Lundqvist,et al. Neurodevelopmental outcome in extremely preterm infants at 2.5 years after active perinatal care in Sweden. , 2013, JAMA.
[2] S. Horvath,et al. Sexually dimorphic gene expression in mouse brain precedes gonadal differentiation. , 2003, Brain research. Molecular brain research.
[3] S. Shankaran,et al. Adverse Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Among Extremely Low Birth Weight Infants With a Normal Head Ultrasound: Prevalence and Antecedents , 2005, Pediatrics.
[4] J. Allsop,et al. Relationship Between White Matter Apparent Diffusion Coefficients in Preterm Infants at Term-Equivalent Age and Developmental Outcome at 2 Years , 2007, Pediatrics.
[5] J. Volpe. Neurology of the Newborn , 1959, Major problems in clinical pediatrics.
[6] E. Paulesu,et al. When all hypotheses are right: A multifocal account of dyslexia , 2009, Human brain mapping.
[7] N Marlow,et al. The EPICure study: associations and antecedents of neurological and developmental disability at 30 months of age following extremely preterm birth , 2005, Archives of Disease in Childhood - Fetal and Neonatal Edition.
[8] J. Gilmore,et al. Impact of sex and gonadal steroids on neonatal brain structure. , 2014, Cerebral cortex.
[9] B. Vohr,et al. Prematurely Born Children Demonstrate White Matter Microstructural Differences at 12 Years of Age, Relative to Term Control Subjects: An Investigation of Group and Gender Effects , 2008, Pediatrics.
[10] Simon C Watkins,et al. Innate Gender-based Proclivity in Response to Cytotoxicity and Programmed Cell Death Pathway* , 2004, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[11] Neil Gelman,et al. Females Follow a More “Compact” Early Human Brain Development Model Than Males. A Case-Control Study of Preterm Neonates , 2009, Pediatric Research.
[12] M. Moseley,et al. Diffusion tensor brain imaging findings at term-equivalent age may predict neurologic abnormalities in low birth weight preterm infants. , 2003, AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology.
[13] L. Papile,et al. White Matter Volume and Anisotropy in Preterm Children: A Pilot Study of Neurocognitive Correlates , 2008 .
[14] U. Ådén,et al. White matter changes in extremely preterm infants, a population‐based diffusion tensor imaging study , 2010, Acta paediatrica.
[15] N. Marlow,et al. Specific language difficulties and school achievement in children born at 25 weeks of gestation or less. , 2008, The Journal of pediatrics.
[16] Daniel Rueckert,et al. Tract-based spatial statistics: Voxelwise analysis of multi-subject diffusion data , 2006, NeuroImage.
[17] A. Connelly,et al. Developmental changes in cerebral grey and white matter volume from infancy to adulthood , 2010, International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience.
[18] L. D. de Vries,et al. Neonatal Tract-Based Spatial Statistics Findings and Outcome in Preterm Infants , 2012, American Journal of Neuroradiology.
[19] H. Lagercrantz,et al. Neonatal magnetic resonance imaging and outcome at age 30 months in extremely preterm infants. , 2012, The Journal of pediatrics.
[20] T. Inder,et al. Neonatal MRI to predict neurodevelopmental outcomes in preterm infants. , 2006, The New England journal of medicine.
[21] Daniel Rueckert,et al. An optimised tract-based spatial statistics protocol for neonates: Applications to prematurity and chronic lung disease , 2010, NeuroImage.
[22] J. Rose,et al. Neonatal microstructural development of the internal capsule on diffusion tensor imaging correlates with severity of gait and motor deficits , 2007, Developmental medicine and child neurology.
[23] M. McMillen. Differential mortality by sex in fetal and neonatal deaths. , 1979, Science.
[24] Chiara Nosarti,et al. Grey and white matter distribution in very preterm adolescents mediates neurodevelopmental outcome. , 2008, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[25] F. Walther,et al. Brain imaging findings in very preterm infants throughout the neonatal period: part II. Relation with perinatal clinical data. , 2009, Early human development.
[26] Andrew Whitelaw,et al. Impaired brain growth and neurodevelopment in preterm infants with posthaemorrhagic ventricular dilatation , 2012, Acta paediatrica.
[27] A. Friederici. The brain basis of language processing: from structure to function. , 2011, Physiological reviews.
[28] B. Vohr,et al. Gender differences in neurodevelopmental outcomes among extremely preterm, extremely‐low‐birthweight infants , 2006, Acta paediatrica.
[29] Joel R. Meyer,et al. Serial Diffusion Tensor Imaging Detects White Matter Changes That Correlate with Motor Outcome in Premature Infants , 2007, Developmental Neuroscience.
[30] C. Finch,et al. The rise and fall of excess male infant mortality , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[31] Daniel Rueckert,et al. A dynamic 4D probabilistic atlas of the developing brain , 2011, NeuroImage.
[32] J. Rose,et al. Neonatal brain structure on MRI and diffusion tensor imaging, sex, and neurodevelopment in very‐low‐birthweight preterm children , 2009, Developmental medicine and child neurology.
[33] Franco Cauda,et al. Different functions in the cingulate cortex, a meta-analytic connectivity modeling study , 2011, NeuroImage.
[34] Neil Marlow,et al. Neonatal and infant outcome in boys and girls born very prematurely , 2012, Pediatric Research.