Objective: We investigated factors associated with isolated mental delay in infants weighing < 1250 g at birth.
Study design: With a case-control design, matching variables for 40 cases included gestation, birth weight, sex, grade of intraventricular hemorrhage, and socioeconomic status. Case subjects had a mental developmental index < 70, and controls had a mental developmental index > or = 85, according to the Bayley Scales of Infant Development II at 18 months' corrected age.
Results: There were no differences between the case and control subjects for neonatal complications and antenatal or postnatal steroid use. There was a marked difference in the cumulative dosage and duration of doxapram therapy used for apnea of prematurity (total dose 2233 +/- 1927 mg vs 615 +/- 767 mg, P < .001; duration 45.2 +/- 32.5 days vs 19.4 +/- 23.4 days, P < .001 for case subjects and control subjects, respectively). Multivariate analysis did not identify additive predictive variables.
Conclusion: Isolated mental delay in infants weighing < 1250 g at birth was associated with the total dosage and duration of doxapram therapy for severe apnea. Although this may be a marker for cerebral dysfunction manifesting as apnea of prematurity, possible adverse effects of doxapram or its preservative, benzyl alcohol, on the developing brain deserve further study.