Pediatrics
Centers To Study Normal Brain Development
To better understand
disease, first understand normal, healthy conditions. That's the
rationale behind the first comprehensive magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) study of normal brain development in children.
The Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia is one of seven pediatric study centers designated by the
National Institutes of Health to participate. The $1.7 million grant to
Children's Hospital runs from 2000 to 2006.
The study's goal is to establish standard anatomical measurements of
normal developing brain structures and to correlate those measurements
with the development of cognitive and behavioral skills.
"We know about the normal
development of motor skills, but we need to know more about normal
brain development," says Edward M. Moss, Ph.D., a pediatric
neurospsychologist at Children's Hospital and co-principal investigator
of the grant. "The brain changes quickly during the first five
years of life. We'll be able to establish a normal growth curve for the
brain."
Children in two major age groups will
be studied: infants and preschoolers (up to age four), and children and
adolescents (ages five to 18). Children's Hospital will study 50 to 60
children among the total of 500 for the entire multicenter project. In
order to study changes over time, all but the oldest children will be
followed over a five-year period.
"This study will produce a
standardized sample for MRI and neuropsychology studies for decades to
come," says physicist John C. Haselgrove, Ph.D., director of the
Magnetic Resonance Research Facility at Children's Hospital and
principal investigator of the grant.
The children will be assessed with a
battery of behavioral, language, motor skills and cognitive tests that
will be correlated with the MRI findings. Having systematic data from
normal, healthy children will provide a basis for comparison with
children who have developmental or neurologic problems.
For example, explains Dr. Moss,
"We could better understand reading problems. If we can compare
MRI scans from children with reading problems to scans from children
who read normally, we might determine whether reading problems are
associated with differences in brain structure. Similarly, we can study
brain development in relation to memory skills. Memory has been studied
more often in disease states than in normal, healthy subjects."
Studies of other disorders such as
autism or attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder might also be
advanced using the database that the study will create.
MRI has been used clinically since
the late 1970s, but only in the past few years have medical
institutions moved toward standardizing the equipment they use.
MRI is safe and noninvasive; it
requires placing a person in a strong magnetic field and measuring the
response of nuclei inside the body's molecules. Different tissues
respond differently; computer software processes the magnetic signals
into sharp three-dimensional images of internal structures.
A related technology, magnetic
resonance spectroscopy (MRS), sorts out different metabolites --
biological chemicals normally processed in the brain.
"We already know that tumors or
metabolic diseases show distinctive signatures detectable by MRS,"
says Dr. Haselgrove. Some of the children to be studied at Children's
Hospital will also be examined by MRS to provide normal data on brain
metabolites.
Although the procedure is noninvasive,
a person must lie motionless for eight to 10 minutes while the MRI
machine scans the brain. For babies, the test will be performed as they
sleep. Children up to age 7 who will be awake during the procedure will
first be familiarized with the equipment by lying in a "mock
magnet" facility that trains them to lie still in practice for the
actual scan. A mounted mirror allows the child to watch a video, which
goes blank temporarily if the child moves too much.
"We've found that this
apparatus is very effective in preparing children for the actual
scan," says Dr. Haselgrove.
The MRI study at Children's Hospital
will be coordinated by the Children's Clinical Research Institute, a
unique academic contract research organization established to conduct
high-quality clinical research that improves the health care of
children.
The
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, the nation's first children's
hospital, is a leader in patient care, education and research. This
373-bed multispecialty hospital provides comprehensive pediatric
services, including home care, to children from before birth through
age 19. The hospital is second in the United States among all
children's hospitals in total research funding from the National
Institutes of Health.
[Contact: John Ascenzi]
14-Jul-2000
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