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Researchers Develop Risk Model to Predict Brain Injury, Stroke in Neonates

Researchers have developed a risk prediction model for the early detection of brain injury and stroke in term neonates, which could improve prevention and treatment efforts.

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By Shania Kennedy

- A new study published this week in JAMA Network Open shows that a recently developed risk prediction model can identify term neonates at risk of perinatal arterial ischemic stroke (PAIS) using common clinical factors.

PAIS is a type of brain injury that disrupts cerebral blood flow between 20 weeks of gestation and postnatal day 28. Arterial ischemic stroke is a major cause of neurological disability in children, with reported annual incidence rates of 1.2 to 8 per 100,000 children, and one in 1,100 live term births. Some of these strokes will be symptomatic during the neonatal period, but others can go unrecognized for months or years. A subset of these never receive a diagnosis.

According to the study, prediction models designed to detect and prevent stroke in adults have had success in the past, but no such models have been developed for perinatal stroke. To bridge this gap in the research, the study authors sought to develop and validate a PAIS prediction model that relied on routinely documented clinical factors.