Cortical responses to tactile stimuli in preterm infants

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Leikos , S , Tokariev , A , Koolen , N , Nevalainen , P & Vanhatalo , S 2020 , ' Cortical responses to tactile stimuli in preterm infants ' , European Journal of Neuroscience , vol. 51 , no. 4 , pp. 1059-1073 . https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.14613

Title: Cortical responses to tactile stimuli in preterm infants
Author: Leikos, Susanna; Tokariev, Anton; Koolen, Ninah; Nevalainen, Päivi; Vanhatalo, Sampsa
Contributor organization: Faculty of Medicine
Kliinisen neurofysiologian yksikkö
Department of Neurosciences
University of Helsinki
HUS Medical Imaging Center
HUS Children and Adolescents
Children's Hospital
HUSLAB
Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics
BioMag Laboratory
Date: 2020-02
Language: eng
Number of pages: 15
Belongs to series: European Journal of Neuroscience
ISSN: 0953-816X
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.14613
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/320990
Abstract: Abstract The conventional assessment of preterm somatosensory functions using averaged cortical responses to electrical stimulation ignores the characteristic components of preterm somatosensory evoked responses (SERs). Our study aimed to systematically evaluate the occurrence and development of SERs after tactile stimulus in preterm infants. We analysed SERs performed during 45 electroencephalograms (EEGs) from 29 infants at the mean post-menstrual age of 30.7 weeks. Altogether 2,087 SERs were identified visually at single trial level from unfiltered signals capturing also their slowest components. We observed salient SERs with a high amplitude slow component at a high success rate after hand (95%) and foot (83%) stimuli. There was a clear developmental change in both the slow wave and the higher frequency components of the SERs. Infants with intraventricular haemorrhage (IVH; eleven infants) had initially normal SERs, but those with bilateral IVH later showed a developmental decrease in the ipsilateral SER occurrence after 30 weeks of post-menstrual age. Our study shows that tactile stimulus applied at bedside elicits salient SERs with a large slow component and an overriding fast oscillation, which are specific to the preterm period. Prior experimental research indicates that such SERs allow studying both subplate and cortical functions. Our present findings further suggest that they might offer a window to the emergence of neurodevelopmental sequalae after major structural brain lesions and, hence, an additional tool for both research and clinical neurophysiological evaluation of infants before term age.
Subject: 3112 Neurosciences
brain monitoring
EEG
intraventricular haemorrhage
neonatal intensive care unit
somatosensory evoked potentials
VISUAL STIMULATION
BRAIN-INJURY
SPINDLE BURSTS
NEURODEVELOPMENTAL OUTCOMES
EARLY MOTOR-ACTIVITY
SUBPLATE NEURONS
TERM
electroencephalogram
NEONATAL EEG
SOMATOSENSORY-EVOKED-POTENTIALS
INTRAVENTRICULAR HEMORRHAGE
3124 Neurology and psychiatry
Peer reviewed: Yes
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: acceptedVersion


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