Background
Congenital heart disease(CHD) is a cardiovascular malformation caused by abnormal heart and/or vascular development in the fetus. In children with CHD, abnormalities in the development and function of the nervous system are common. At present, there is a lack of research on the preoperative neurological development and injury of young children with non-cyanotic CHD. The objective of the current study is to determine the changes in white matter, gray matter, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in children with noncyanotic CHD as compared with healthy controls.
Methods
Children diagnosed with non-cyanotic CHD on ultrasonography (n=54) and healthy control subjects (n=35) aged 1–3 years. Brain MRI was performed prior to surgery for CHD. The SPM v12 software was used to calculate the volumes of the gray matter, white matter, CSF, and the whole brain (sum of the gray-matter, white-matter, and CSF volumes). Volume differences between the two groups were analyzed. Voxelbased morphometry was used to compare specific brain regions with statistically significant atrophy.
Results
Compared with the control group, the study group had significantly reduced whole-brain white-matter volume (P<0.05), but similar whole-brain graymatter, CSF, and whole-brain volumes(P>0.05). As compared with the healthy controls, children with non-cyanotic CHD had mild atrophy in the white matter of the anterior central gyrus, the posterior central gyrus and the pulvinar.
Conclusions
Children with non-cyanotic CHD show decreased white-matter volume before surgery, and this volume reduction is mainly concentrated in the somatosensory and somatic motor nerve regions.