November is #PrematurityAwarenessMonth and Ally has partnered with March of Dimes to raise awareness. Join the fight against the #1 killer of babies in the U.S.
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November is #PrematurityAwarenessMonth and Ally has partnered with March of Dimes to raise awareness. Join the fight against the #1 killer of babies in the U.S.
Brain Changes Linked to Prematurity May Explain Risk of Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Disturbances in the early stages of brain growth, such as preterm birth – when many of the brain’s structures have not yet fully developed – appears to affect the brain’s neuro-circuitry, which may explain premature babies’ higher risk of neurodevelopmental disorders including ADHD and autism spectrum disorder.
Researchers led by Natasha Lepore, PhD, of The Saban Research Institute of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, have located significant alterations to specific surface regions of the brain. Described in a study published online this week by the journal Brain Structure and Function, their identification of neuroanatomical changes related to prematurity helps explain what brain structure and circuitry are affected, and may lead to designing effective prevention strategies and early interventional treatments for cognitive disabilities.
Using three-dimensional brain structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), Lepore and colleagues analyzed the structure and neural circuitry of two specific areas of the brain in 17 preterm and 19 term-born babies: the thalamus – the brain’s relay station, critical to sending and receiving sensory information – and the putamen, part of an intricate circuit connecting to the brain’s frontal lobe and involved in a number of different processes, most notably regulation of movement and learning.
While many studies have spotted alterations in various brain structures related to prematurity, this is the first study to link the structural abnormalities to specific neuro-circuitry, the communication pathways of the brain. To investigate these changes, the CHLA researchers performed a novel, combined analysis of the external shape and dimension of the surfaces of the thalamus and putamen, and compared the relative position of these structures to one another.
“We found that regional abnormalities of the thalamus are associated with alterations of the putamen, possibly due to disturbed development of shared frontal-subcortical connectivity,” said first author Yi Lao, MS, of the Department of Radiology at CHLA. More specifically, she added, the significantly correlated regions in these two structures point to frontal and sub-cortical pathways that are essential to important functions such as attention, decision-making, planning, abstract reasoning and memory.
Lepore adds that, for the first time, they have demonstrated the feasibility of using measurements of these abnormalities in the brain of preterm newborns as potential indicators of risk for future cognitive and behavioral problems.
“The ability to identify structural signs of neurodevelopmental disease shortly after birth in premature infants could allow for early interventions, increasing the child’s social and learning behaviors as they age,” said Lepore.
(Image: Shutterstock)
Today, for World Prematurity Day, Stand True is going purple. We mourn the loss of all those who have died in the womb, and all those who were born too early too survive outside the womb. We thank God for blessing us with life, even just for a short time. And of course, for those preemies who grow up too! All Life is Precious
Help make this statistic 1 and 15 by taking 10 Baby Steps this month!
TODAY IS PREMATURITY AWARENESS DAY- A day to remember the lives of those that have been lost but to also look into a future where every baby will celebrate their first birthday!
In just 10 steps, students across the country are raising awareness and necessary funds to celebrate March of Dimes Prematurity Awareness Month and World Prematurity Day
Want to become involved in PAM?!
Follow these 10 baby steps and help spread awareness in your school and your community!
#november #prematurityawarenessmonth #youarewelcome
Register your events and color your schools purple!
💜💜 #prematurityawarenessmonth #prematurity #preemies #wearpurple #purpleforpreemies #marchofdimes #support #raiseawareness #family 💜💜
It’s PAM! Arizona from Grey’s Anatomy believes in the babies! Do you?
Video: Baby Has Fun Playing with Hyper Pug Puppies
Don’t fall asleep yet! PAM has only begun go to: http://www.marchofdimes.org/volunteers/get-your-school-involved.aspx
to get started!!!!
PAM is here!!! Ask!
Get started with Prematurity Awareness Month at your school!
Send questions to my Ask to find out more!
Want to make a difference at your high school? Start here! Take these Baby Steps to make a difference in your community and become part of Team Youth.
Want to get involved on your campus with Prematurity Awareness this November? Start here!
Thank you to youth for supporting March of Dimes this November. The National Youth Council do #PurpleSelfies in honor of Prematurity Awareness Month!
Shoutout from to Lincoln Southeast's FBLA!! Thanks for your submission :)
"I'm Baylie Darnell and I'm in FBLA a from Lincoln Southeast! I just got an email from my advisor and was asked to respond. We "colored" our school purple! We put up all of the wonderful signs and even made flyers! We also put up all those balloons and had announcements the week before. Some of the girls handed out the stickers and I decided to hand out candy. A lot of the students wore purple so I was pretty happy being head of the committee with Taylor and Abby! I hope we are featured on your website/social medias! I'm going to add this picture to my social media accounts and be sure to tag you guys. Thank you so much for giving us the opportunity to participate as a school with the March of Dimes and help raise awareness! (: -Baylie Darnell"
FBLA Adviser
Our FBLA club encouraged students and staff to wear purple on World Prematurity Day. We held a “miracle minute” during Advisory and collected just over $100 for March of Dimes. We also posted a poster with the “1 in 9” statistic on every 9th locker!
#DidYouKnow that research funded by the March of Dimes led to the development of surfactant therapy which is a lung treatment that helps premature infants with breathing?