4.1 Article

Bilirubin-Induced Neurological Dysfunction: A Clinico-Radiological-Neurophysiological Correlation in 30 Consecutive Children

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHILD NEUROLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 14, Pages 1579-1583

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0883073816666473

Keywords

bilirubin-induced neurological dysfunction; kernicterus; magnetic resonance imaging

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The clinical expression of bilirubin-induced neurological dysfunction varies according to severity and location of the disease. Definitions have been proposed to describe different bilirubin-induced neurological dysfunction subtypes. Our objective was to describe the severity and clinico-radiological-neurophysiological correlation in 30 consecutive children with bilirubin-induced neurological dysfunction seen over a period of 5 years. Thirty children exposed to acute neonatal bilirubin encephalopathy were included in the study. The mean peak total serum bilirubin level was 625 mol/L (range 480-900 mol/L). Acoustic brainstem responses were abnormal in 73% (n = 22). Pallidal hyperintensity was observed on magnetic resonance imaging in 20 children. Peak total serum bilirubin levels correlated with motor severity (P = .03). Children with severe motor impairment were likely to manifest severe auditory neuropathy (P < .01). We found that in a resource-constrained setting, classical kernicterus was the most common bilirubin-induced neurological dysfunction subtype, and the majority of children had abnormal acoustic brainstem responses and magnetic resonance imaging.

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