Objective: Preterm birth at <32 weeks' gestational age has a specific predilection for periventricular white matter injury. Early prediction of concomitant motor sequelae is a fundamental clinical issue. Recently, functional MRI was introduced as a noninvasive method for investigating the functional integrity of the neonatal brain. We aimed at implementing a unilateral passive forearm extension/flexion functional MRI paradigm in a routine clinical MRI setup to allow noninvasive mapping of the sensorimotor system in preterm infants and to relate the functional data to structural and behavioral data.
Patients and methods: Eight patients (median gestational age: 26.5 weeks; median birth weight: 885 g) were included. The functional MRI was performed at term-equivalent age (median: 39 weeks' postconceptional age) under chloral hydrate (50 mg/kg) sedation. In 5 of 8 patients, functional MRI data acquisition was successful. This resulted in 10 functional data sets (5 for passive stimulation of each forearm).
Results: Unilateral stimulation was associated with mainly bilateral activation of the primary sensorimotor cortex (n = 7 of 10 data sets), the prevailing hemodynamic response being a negative blood oxygenation level-dependent signal. Positive blood oxygenation level-dependent response or failure to activate the sensorimotor cortex (n = 3 of 10 data sets) were seen in those patients with aberrant structural/behavioral indices.
Conclusions: Our data show the feasibility of passive unilateral sensorimotor stimulation during neonatal clinical MRI protocols. The bilateral activation pattern observed at this age is compatible with a bilaterally distributed sensorimotor system. Our data validate initial accounts for a raised incidence of negative blood oxygenation level-dependent responses in the primary sensorimotor cortex at this developmental stage. The negative blood oxygenation level-dependent response is likely to reflect a reduction of the oxy/deoxy-hemoglobin ratio during a maturational stage characterized by rapid formation of synapses, yet ineffective processing. Positive blood oxygenation level-dependent responses or failure to activate the sensorimotor cortex may be an early indicator of abnormal development and will have to be followed up carefully.