Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (hemiplegia)
3,997 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Children with and without spastic hemiplegia were identified among a representative sample of 1048 low-birthweight survivors by clinical assessment after three years of age. The hypothesis that hemiplegia was predetermined at birth was tested by estimating the probability of hemiplegia for each infant by logistic regression analysis, using data from hospital records on conditions known at the time of birth. 16 of 42 children with cerebral palsy had spastic hemiplegia. Allowing for the lower birthweights of hemiplegic children, increased prevalence was associated with previous reproductive loss, breech vaginal delivery, later birth-order, prolonged second stage of delivery, emergency caesarean section, and low Apgar scores. These variables identified correctly most children as having a higher or lower estimated probability of hemiplegia. Hemiplegia was also associated with prolonged respiratory disease and intraventricular haemorrhage. In this population it is likely that intrapartum events were closely related to the pathogenesis of hemiplegia; their effects may have been mediated by postnatal events.
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PMID:Cerebral palsy in low-birthweight infants. I. Spastic hemiplegia: associations with intrapartum stress. 337 63

Twenty children with spastic diplegia were identified by clinical assessment among a representative cohort of 1048 survivors with a birthweight of 2000g or less. Data from hospital case-records were used to investigate which perinatal conditions might differentiate infants with diplegia from other low-birthweight survivors. Even allowing for a strong association with lower gestational age, diplegic children were more likely to have suffered respiratory disease, necrotising enterocolitis and fits in the neonatal period, than children without cerebral palsy. Among preterm infants, diplegia differed from hemiplegia mainly in a lack of significant association with recorded maternal characteristics and markers of intrapartum stress. Important determinants of diplegia were not identified, but the results suggest that infants born both immature and relatively immature for their gestational age have the highest risk of diplegia. Factors that influence the rate of fetal development may be implicated in the aetiology of diplegia in both preterm and fullterm infants.
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PMID:Cerebral palsy in low-birthweight infants. II. Spastic diplegia: associations with fetal immaturity. 337 67