Table 1.
Lateral ventricle volume of 165 normal infants and 95% confidence interval (mm3)
| Gender | Bilateral | Left side | Right side | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volume | 95% confidence interval | Volume | 95% confidence interval | Volume | 95% confidence interval | |
| Male | 13,093.25 ± 5972.09 | 11,920.22~14,266.28 | 6900.83 ± 3289.44 | 6254.72~7546.94 | 6192.43 ± 2804.55 | 5041.56~6743.29 |
| Female | 11,092.70 ± 4647.55 | 9922.22~12,263.17 | 5843.01 ± 2529.24 | 5206.03~6479.99 | 5249.69 ± 2202.58 | 4695.00~5804.40 |
| Lenene homogeneity test of variance | F = 2.854, p = 0.093 | – | – | – | – | |
| Independent sample t test | t = 2.267, p < 0.05 | – | – | – | – | |
| Paired sample t test | – | Male: t = 5.748, p < 0.01 | ||||
| Female: t = 4.972, p < 0.01 | ||||||
After implementation of Lenene homogeneity test of variance for both groups of data (F = 2.854, p = 0.093), the independent sample t test was conducted for both groups. The total lateral ventricle volume of the male infant was larger than that of the female infant, wherein the difference was of statistical significance (t = 2.267, p < 0.05). For both male and female infants, the left side ventricle volume was larger than the right ventricle volume based on paired sample t test, wherein the difference was of statistical significance (male: t = 5.748, p < 0.01; female: t = 4.972, p < 0.01)