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Brain Damage in Preterm and Full-Term Neonates: Serum Biomarkers for the Early Diagnosis and Intervention

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox12020309

Keywords

intraventricular hemorrhage; periventricular leukomalacia; cerebral palsy; hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy; neonatal stroke; oxidative stress; neurodevelopment; cerebral damage; S-100B

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The brain is susceptible to various insults, and oxidative stress may be the common pathway of these insults. Fetuses and newborns are especially vulnerable to oxidative stress due to their limited antioxidant defenses. Current clinical practice lacks reliable early serum biomarkers for the identification of newborns at high risk of neurological diseases. It is important to identify specific biomarkers for early monitoring and neuroprotective strategies. However, further studies are needed to explore the association of these biomarkers with the type and severity of perinatal brain damage.
The Brain is vulnerable to numerous insults that can act in the pre-, peri-, and post-natal period. There is growing evidence that demonstrate how oxidative stress (OS) could represent the final common pathway of all these insults. Fetuses and newborns are particularly vulnerable to OS due to their inability to active the antioxidant defenses. Specific molecules involved in OS could be measured in biologic fluids as early biomarkers of neonatal brain injury with an essential role in neuroprotection. Although S-100B seems to be the most studied biomarker, its use in clinical practice is limited by the complexity of brain damage etiopathogenesis and the time of blood sampling in relation to the brain injury. Reliable early specific serum markers are currently lacking in clinical practice. It is essential to determine if there are specific biomarkers that can help caregivers to monitor the progression of the disease in order to active an early neuroprotective strategy. We aimed to describe, in an educational review, the actual evidence on serum biomarkers for the early identification of newborns at a high risk of neurological diseases. To move the biomarkers from the bench to the bedside, the assays must be not only be of a high sensitivity but suitable for the very rapid processing and return of the results for the clinical practice to act on. For the best prognosis, more studies should focus on the association of these biomarkers to the type and severity of perinatal brain damage.

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