Background: Quantitative MRI techniques help recognize delayed brain development in fetuses with congenital heart disease (CHD). Ventriculomegaly became an early marker of brain dysmaturity.
Objective: Evaluate longitudinally the cerebral ventricular and total brain volumes (TBV) in infants with CHD compared to normal neonates: testing the fetal brain dysmaturity and following its progression post operatively.
Study design: Fetal and post-operative MRIs were obtained on fetuses/neonates with CHD requiring invasive intervention within the first month after birth. Volumetric measurement was done with ITK-SNAP and analyzed post-hoc.
Results: Ten cases were evaluated with a significant decrease in ventricular volumes from the fetal to the post-operative neonatal timepoint (p = 0.0297). Infants with HLHS had a significant increase postoperatively in their TBV (p = 0.0396).
Conclusions: TBV increased post operatively inversely mirrored by the decrement of the ventricular volumes. This could be explained by the establishment an increase of brain blood flow after surgery.