Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3054032 | European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2014 | 10 Pages |
ObjectiveTo quantify the neuronal connectivity in preterm infants between homologous channels of both hemispheres.MethodsEEG coherence analysis was performed on serial EEG recordings collected from preterm infants with normal neurological follow-up. The coherence spectrum was divided in frequency bands: δnewborn(0–2 Hz), θnewborn(2–6 Hz), αnewborn(6–13 Hz), βnewborn(13–30 Hz). Coherence values were evaluated as a function of gestational age (GA) and postnatal maturation.ResultsAll spectra show two clear peaks in the δnewborn and θnewborn-band, corresponding to the delta and theta EEG waves observed in preterm infants. In the δnewborn-band the peak magnitude coherence decreases with GA and postnatal maturation for all channels. In the θnewborn-band, the peak magnitude coherence decreases with GA for all channels, but increases with postnatal maturation for the frontal polar channels. In the βnewborn-band a modest magnitude coherence peak was observed in the occipital channels, which decreases with GA.ConclusionsInterhemispherical connectivity develops analogously with electrocortical maturation: signal intensities at low frequencies decrease with GA and postnatal maturation, but increase at high frequencies with postnatal maturation. In addition, peak magnitude coherence is a clear trend indicator for brain maturation.SignificanceCoherence analysis can aid in the clinical assessment of the functional connectivity of the infant brain with maturation.