undivided reason the incidence of c...
undivided reason the incidence of cerebral palsy in terminus infants has not changed since the 1960 is that fetal heart monitoring does not identify babies diagnosed with white matter brain injury after birth, according to a March 26 2004 freshs release from Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore. White brain matter injury can arise if a fetus does not master enough oxygen from its mother's family Physicians use fetal heart monitoring as the primary process of identifying babies who later may be diagnosed with brain injury. Researchers examined a database of infants born at John Hopkins between June 1999 and September 2001 They rest 40 babies with white brain matter injury and matched them with 40 babies who were delivered at the same gestational age (ie, between 23 and 34 weeks) in the same manner. Researchers then examined fetal heart monitoring data to determine whether there were any differences that may have foretold of impending brain injury, and they did not find any. Fetal Heart Monitoring Ineffective at Diagnosing Cerebral Palsy (new release, Baltimore: John Hopkins Medicine, March 26 2004) http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press _releases/2004/O3_26_04.html. (accessed 29 March 2004) COPYRIGHT 2004 Association of Operating sweep Nurses, Inc. COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group
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