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. 2024 Jan 30;34(2):421–429. doi: 10.1007/s00062-023-01378-9

Table 1.

Characteristics of included infants

Extremely Preterm Neonatesa, b (n = 33)
Perinatal/Postnatal Characteristics
Female n = 16
Male n = 17
GA at Birth (weeks + days)c 26 + 1, SD = 0 + 3
Vaginal Delivery n = 3
Caesarean Delivery n = 30
Birth Weight (gram)c 833, SD = 242
Singleton Pregnancy n = 21
Multiple Pregnancy n = 12
Surfactant Received n = 33
Retinopathy of Prematurity n = 15
Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia n = 6
Necrotizing Enterocolitis n = 2
Patent Ductus Arteriosus n = 4
Perinatal Asphyxiad n = 8
PMA at MRI (weeks + days)c 37 + 2, SD = 1 + 3
Neonatal Mortality Assessment
CRIB II Scorec 11, SD = 3
Maternal Characteristics
Age at Delivery (years)c 32, SD = 5
Preeclampsia n = 7
Intra-Amniotic Infection (Chorioamnionitis)e n = 4
Gestational Diabetes Mellitus n = 1
Assessment of Neurodevelopmental Outcomes at 12 Months Corrected-Age
Cognitive Outcome Scoresc, g 94, SD = 16
Language Outcome Scoresc, g 99, SD = 12
Motor Outcome Scoresc, g 94, SD = 14

CRIB Clinical Risk Index for Babies, GA Gestational age, MRI Magnetic resonance imaging, PMA Post-menstrual age

a Studied infants have been reported previously (MDME- and DTI-based data). However, these investigations focused on different research objectives9,10,21

b Born at < 28 weeks of gestation

c Data presented as mean accompanied by standard deviation (SD)

d Based on Apgar scores, umbilical cord pH, first blood gas analysis (pH, base excess, and lactate), and clinical presentation (no evidence/absence of asphyxia-related brain injury)

e Based on placental histology, bacterial culture, inflammatory markers, and clinical presentation