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Fig. 1 | BMC Pediatrics

Fig. 1

From: Intraventricular hemorrhage in asphyxiated newborns treated with hypothermia: a look into incidence, timing and risk factors

Fig. 1

Brain magnetic resonance imaging in asphyxiated newborns treated with hypothermia who developed intraventricular hemorrhage, axial T2-weighted imaging (superior row) and coronal T2-weighted imaging (inferior row). a Brain magnetic resonance imaging in an asphyxiated newborn developing hemorrhage limited to the choroid plexus in the lateral ventricle (thick arrows). b Brain magnetic resonance imaging in an asphyxiated newborn developing an IVH without ventricular dilatation, showing the intraventricular hemorrhage in the lateral ventricles and the third ventricle (thick arrows) without dilatation of the ventricles. c Brain magnetic resonance imaging in an asphyxiated newborn developing IVH with ventricular dilatation, showing the intraventricular hemorrhage with dilatation of the lateral ventricles and the third ventricle (thick arrows). d Brain magnetic resonance imaging in an asphyxiated newborn developing IVH and parenchymal hemorrhage, showing a large right intraventricular and parieto-occipital parenchymal hemorrhage (thick arrows) with some extension into the left ventricle. Possible infarcted zones in the bilateral watershed areas were noted (thin arrow)

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