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KMID : 1039920130200010113
Neonatal Medicine
2013 Volume.20 No. 1 p.113 ~ p.120
The Clinical Characteristics and the Neurodevelopmental Outcomes of the Neonates with Cerebellar Hemorrhage
Kim Cu-Rie

Choi Ka-Young
Son Se-Hyung
Kim Yoon-Joo
Shin Seung-Han
Lee Jae-Myoung
Lee Ju-Young
Sohn Jin-A
Lee Jin-A
Choi Chang-Won
Kim Ee-Kyung
Kim Han-Suk
Kim Beyong-Il
Choi Jung-Hwan
Abstract
Purpose: We present our experience of 14 neonates with cerebellar hemorrhage and describe the clinical characteristics and the neurodevelopmental outcomes.

Methods: Fourteen neonates were identified as having cerebellar hemorrhage, based on the brain MRI findings at the two university hospitals from January 2007 to July 2011. Twelve preterm infants with the brain MRI taken before the discharge, and 2 term infants having taken the brain MRI with birth asphyxia were enrolled. The electronic medical records of the infants were reviewed.

Results: Ten (71.4%) infants were found to have multifocal or lobar cerebellar hemorrhage involving both hemispheres. Three infants had unilateral lesions in the right hemisphere, and one infant had a left hemisphere lesion. Six infants (42%) had co-existing high grade IVH (¡Ãgrade III); 6 infants (42%) had periventricular leukomalacia (PVL); and 6 infants (42%) had posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus (PHH). After discharge, 12 infants (85.7%) were followed at the outpatient clinics for at least 6 months. Two out of 9 infants (22.2%) with other neurological co-morbidities (IVH¡Ãgrade III, PVL, or PHH) had cerebral palsy, and 5 infants (55.6%) had developmental delay assessed by the Bayley scales. None of the infants without other neurological co-morbidities had cerebral palsy or developmental delay.

Conclusion: Neonatal cerebellar hemorrhage is often diagnosed incidentally on the brain MRI in the preterm infants. If there is no concomitant high-grade IVH, PVL or PHH, cerebellar hemorrhage seems to hardly accompany its own specific symptoms, and the neurodevelopmental outcomes seem to be favorable as well. However, further long-term, large scale studies are necessary.
KEYWORD
Cerebellar hemorrhage, Preterm, Magnetic resonance imaging
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