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Physiological evidence consistent with reduced neuroplasticity in human adolescents born preterm

journal contribution
posted on 2022-11-30, 03:29 authored by Julia Pitcher, A M Riley, S H Doeltgen, L Kurylowicz, J C Rothwell, S M McAllister, A E Smith, A Clow, D J Kennaway, M C Ridding
Preterm-born children commonly experience motor, cognitive, and learning difficulties that may be accompanied by altered brain microstructure, connectivity, and neurochemistry. However, the mechanisms linking the altered neurophysiology with the behavioral outcomes are unknown. Here we provide the first physiological evidence that human adolescents born preterm at or before 37 weeks of completed gestation have a significantly reduced capacity for cortical neuroplasticity, the key overall mechanism underlying learning and memory. We examined motor cortex neuroplasticity in three groups of adolescents who were born after gestations of ≤32 completed weeks (early preterm), 33-37 weeks (late preterm), and 38 -41 weeks (term) using a noninvasive transcranial magnetic brain stimulation technique to induce long-term depression (LTD)-like neuroplasticity. Compared with term-born adolescents, both early and late preterm adolescents had reduced LTD-like neuroplasticity in response to brain stimulation that was also associated with low salivary cortisol levels. We also compared neuroplasticity in term-born adolescents with that in term-born young adults, finding that the motor cortex retains a relatively enhanced neuroplastic capacity in adolescence. These findings provide a possible mechanistic link between the altered brain physiology of preterm birth and the subsequent associated behavioral deficits, particularly in learning and memory. They also suggest that altered hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis function due to preterm birth may be a significant modulator of this altered neuroplasticity. This latter finding may offer options in the development of possible therapeutic interventions. © 2012 the authors.

History

Journal

Journal of Neuroscience

Volume

32

Pagination

1640 - 16416

ISSN

0270-6474

eISSN

1529-2401

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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