Journal ArticleUnknown
Children with cerebral palsy: severity and trends over time
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of Oxford, University of Warwick, University of Liverpool, Queens University, ...
Published InPaediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology
Year2009
Citations74
Abstract
Increasingly, more very-low-birthweight infants in the developed world are now expected to survive the neonatal period than was previously the case. There are concerns that there may be a related increase in the number of infants developing severe sensorimotor impairments. Pooled data from five registers contributing to the UK Network of Cerebral Palsy Registers, Surveys and Databases were used to identify patterns of motor impairment in relation to additional impairments and to birthweight, and to assess whether prevalence of cerebral palsy (CP) by birthweight and by severity of motor impairment had changed over time. Low-birthweight infants are at greater risk of developing CP than larger-birthweight babies. The CP rate amongst children with birthweights <2500 g was significantly higher at 16…
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