Level of In Utero Cocaine Exposure and Neonatal Ultrasound Findings

Author:

Frank Deborah A.12,McCarten Kathleen M.1,Robson Caroline D.3,Mirochnick Mark1,Cabral Howard2,Park Henry2,Zuckerman Barry1

Affiliation:

1. From Boston University School of Medicine;

2. Boston University School of Public Health; and

3. Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

Abstract

Objective.  To assess whether there is an association between the level of in utero cocaine exposure and findings on neonatal cranial ultrasound, controlling for potentially confounding variables. Study Design. In a prospective longitudinal study, three cocaine exposure groups were defined by maternal report and infant meconium assay: unexposed, heavier cocaine exposure (>75th percentile self-reported days of use or of meconium benzoylecogonine concentration) or lighter cocaine exposure (all others). Neonatal ultrasounds from 241 well, term infants were read by a single radiologist who was masked to the exposure group. Results. Infants with lighter cocaine exposure did not differ from the unexposed infants on any ultrasound findings. After controlling for infant gender, gestational age, and birth weightz scores and for maternal parity, blood pressure in labor, ethnicity, and use of cigarettes, alcohol, and marijuana during pregnancy, the more heavily cocaine-exposed infants were more likely than the unexposed infants to show subependymal hemorrhage in the caudothalamic groove (covariate adjusted odds ratio: 3.88; 95% confidence interval: 1.45, 10.35). Conclusions. This is the first study to demonstrate that ultrasound findings suggestive of vascular injury to the neonatal central nervous system are related to the level of prenatal cocaine exposure. Inconsistency in previous research in identifying an association between prenatal cocaine exposure and neonatal cranial ultrasound findings may reflect failure to consider dose effects.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference29 articles.

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2. Neurosonographic abnormalities associated with maternal history of cocaine use in neonates of appropriate size for their gestational age.;Dogra;Am J Neuroradiol,1994

3. Neurosonographic findings in full-term infants born to maternal cocaine abusers: visualization of subependymal and periventricular cysts.;Cohen;J Clin Ultrasound,1994

4. Cranial ultrasonography in term infants exposed in utero to cocaine.;Bandstra;Pediatr Res,1993

5. Natal status of infants of cocaine users and control subjects: a prospective comparison.;Hurt;J Perinatol,1995

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