Neuropsychological Outcome of Children With Intrauterine Growth Restriction: A 9-Year Prospective Study
- R. Geva, R. Eshel, Y. Leitner, A. Valevski, S. Harel
- Medicine, PsychologyPediatrics
- 1 July 2006
The neuropsychological profile at 9 years of age indicates that late-onset intrauterine growth restriction compromises frontal network functioning, reaffirm that functional coherence depends on preestablished structural growth and reorganization of the central nervous system.
The developmental outcome of children born to heroin-dependent mothers, raised at home or adopted.
- A. Ornoy, V. Michailevskaya, I. Lukashov, R. Bar-Hamburger, S. Harel
- Psychology, MedicineInternational Journal of Child Abuse & Neglect
- 1 May 1996
Memory functions of children born with asymmetric intrauterine growth restriction
- R. Geva, R. Eshel, Y. Leitner, A. Fattal-Valevski, S. Harel
- Psychology, MedicineBrain Research
- 30 October 2006
Growth Patterns in Children With Intrauterine Growth Retardation and Their Correlation to Neurocognitive Development
- A. Fattal-Valevski, H. Toledano-Alhadef, Y. Leitner, R. Geva, R. Eshel, S. Harel
- MedicineJournal of Child Neurology
- 1 July 2009
The relationship between somatic growth and neurocognitive outcome was studied in a cohort of 136 children with intrauterine growth retardation. The children were followed up from birth to 9 to 10…
Experimental intrauterine growth retardation alters renal development
- H. Bassan, Leonor Leider Trejo, S. Harel
- MedicinePediatric nephrology (Berlin, West)
- 29 November 2000
The results support the concept that the reduced number of glomeruli may contribute to impaired renal function, thus predisposing to neonatal renal dysfunction and late sequelae, such as adult hypertension, in IUGR neonates.
Neurodevelopmental Outcome of Children With Intrauterine Growth Retardation: A Longitudinal, 10-Year Prospective Study
- Y. Leitner, A. Fattal-Valevski, S. Harel
- MedicineJournal of Child Neurology
- 1 May 2007
Children with intrauterine growth retardation demonstrated a specific profile of neurocognitive difficulties at school age, accounting for lower school achievements, and the best perinatal parameter predictive of neurodevelopment and IQ was the Cephalization Index.
Neurodevelopmental and Cognitive Assessment of Children Born Growth Restricted to Mothers with and Without Preeclampsia
- A. Many, A. Fattal, Y. Leitner, M. Kupferminc, S. Harel, A. Jaffa
- MedicineHypertension in Pregnancy
- 1 January 2003
It is concluded that newborns born growth restricted after pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia have a lower IQ at the age of 3 years compared to growth‐restricted babies without preeClampsia.
Multiple presentation of mitochondrial disorders
- A. Nissenkorn, A. Zeharia, T. Lerman-Sagie
- Medicine, BiologyArchives of Disease in Childhood
- 1 September 1999
It is suggested that mitochondrial disorders should be evaluated in children presenting with a complex neurological picture or multisystem involvement, and not just in children with a single neurological symptom and other system involvement.
Cerebral Palsy—Long-Term Medical, Functional, Educational, and Psychosocial Outcomes
- R. Mesterman, Y. Leitner, S. Harel
- Medicine, PsychologyJournal of Child Neurology
- 1 January 2010
The large majority is involved in varied leisure activities and report a high level of life satisfaction and the long-term medical, functional, educational, and psychosocial outcomes of people with cerebral palsy are described.
The Pregnant Spontaneously Hypertensive Rat as a Model of Asymmetric Intrauterine Growth Retardation and Neurodevelopmental Delay
It is speculated that the model of pregnant spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) closely simulate human IUGR caused by hypertension in pregnancy and should enable investigation of mechanisms of hypertension-mediated placenta-vascular injury as well as provide a system for preclinical evaluations of future preventive neuroprotective treatments.
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