Am J Perinatol 1989; 6(4): 405-411
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-999627
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

© 1989 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.

Influence of Gestational Age on Early Neuromotor Development in the Preterm Infant

Martha C. Piper, Paul J. Byrne, Lynn E. Pinnell
  • Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine and Department of Pediatrics, University of Alberta and the Division of Newborn Medicine, University of Alberta Hospitals, Edmonton, Alberta
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
04 March 2008 (online)

ABSTRACT

The impact of the extrauterine environment on the early neuromotor development of a cohort of 73 normally developing preterm infants was assessed prospectively by comparing the neurologic maturation from birth to term of two groups of infants born at different gestational ages (less than 32 weeks; 32 to 36 weeks). Assessments were performed at 32, 35, and 40 weeks postconceptional age. Detailed analyses revealed that the neuromotor performance at the three points in time of the two gestational age groups of preterm infants did not differ. These findings suggest that the early neuromotor development from birth to term of the normally developing preterm infant is essentially unaffected by the gestational age at birth.

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