학술논문

Brain lesions in newborns exposed to high-dose magnesium sulfate during preterm labor.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Perinatology. Jan2006, Vol. 26 Issue 1, p57-63. 7p.
Subject
*BRAIN tumors
*NEWBORN infants
*PREMATURE labor
*MAGNESIUM sulfate
*PREGNANT women
*PERINATOLOGY
Language
ISSN
0743-8346
Abstract
High-dosage, tocolytic magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) administered to pregnant women during preterm labor can be toxic, and sometimes lethal, for their newborns (Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (relative mortality risk 2.82, 95% confidence interval 1.2–6.6)). Based on the results of the Magnesium and Neurologic Endpoints Trial and the work of many others, a unifying triangular concept is proposed to account for the increased prevalence of brain lesions, with their likely resultant mortality, in neonates and infants exposed to high-dose MgSO4 in the context of preterm labor. We review the evidence that: (1) elevated circulating levels of serum ionized magnesium occurring in mothers, and therefore in their babies, at the time of delivery are associated with subsequent neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH); (2) neonatal IVH is strongly associated with lenticulostriate vasculopathy (LSV), an unusual mineralizing lesion involving the thalami and basal ganglia of the neonate; and, (3) exposure to 50 g or more of tocolytic MgSO4 during preterm labor is associated with the development of LSV.Journal of Perinatology (2006) 26, 57–63. doi:10.1038/sj.jp.7211419; published online 1 December 2005 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]