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Periventricular Leukomalacia: Ultrasonic and Neuropathological Correlations

107

Citations

19

References

1990

Year

Abstract

Ultrasound scans of a preterm neonate (27 weeks gestation) at seven weeks of age showed periventricular echo-free cavities, but these were no longer visible at 15 weeks, three weeks before the infant died. At autopsy, a linear glial scar, extending from the periventricular white-matter into the white axis of the parasagittal gyrus, was found in the area occupied by the periventricular cysts. The larger cavity was reduced to a slit-like excavation in the midst of glial tissue. Unsuspected focal infarcts in the cerebral cortex were also found. This observation demonstrates that transient echo-free cavities represent foci of cystic necrosis, which are subject to secondary collapse. In the authors' experience, the linear extension of periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) into the core of parasagittal gyri is a frequent feature of PVL, and one which cannot easily be accounted for by the usual explanations of border-zone ischaemic softening.

References

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