In a retrospective study 516 cranial MRI examinations of children aged 1 month to 14 years were re-evaluated for myelination. An objective staging system for the assessment of the degree of myelination was designed, based on the characteristic patterns of myelin-typical signal which develop in the course of brain maturation. Thus myelination can be estimated using only routine MRI examinations; no additional measurements of signal intensities are necessary. In order to obtain detailed information, ten regions of the brain are ranked separately, with comparisons of the T1- and T2-weighted images for each region. The application of the staging system to the case material revealed typical age ranges for the stages, and retarded myelination in some children. In most cases the observed retardation affected several regions but never the whole brain. Such delays can only be detected by separate assessment of the degree of myelination in each region of the brain.
777 cerebral MRI examinations of children aged 3 days to 14 years were staged for myelination to establish an age standardization. Staging was performed using a system proposed in a previous paper, separately ranking 10 different regions of the brain. Interpretation of the results led to the identification of four clinical diagnoses that are frequently associated with delays in myelination: West syndrome, cerebral palsy, developmental retardation, and congenital anomalies. In addition, it was found that assessment of myelination in children with head injuries was not practical as alterations in MRI signal can simulate earlier stages of myelination. Age limits were therefore calculated from the case material after excluding all children with these conditions. When simplifications of the definition of the stages are applied, these age limits for the various stages of myelination of each of the 10 regions of the brain make the staging system applicable for routine assessment of myelination.
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