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Featured researches published by J.H. Ruys.


The Lancet | 1991

Impairments, disabilities, and handicaps of very preterm and very-low-birthweight infants at five years of age

Sylvia Veen; M.H Ens-Dokkum; A.M Schreuder; S.P Verloove-Vanhorick; J.H. Ruys; Ronald Brand

The Project On Preterm and Small for gestational age infants (POPS) was started in the Netherlands in 1983 to investigate the relation between prenatal/perinatal factors and mortality/morbidity in very preterm and very-low-birthweight infants. Of the 1338 liveborn infants (less than 32 weeks and/or less than 1500 g) 966 were enrolled in the five-year (chronological age) follow-up programme; 96% of these children were assessed during a home visit. The overall outcome was expressed as impairments, disabilities, and handicaps according to World Health Organisation criteria. Of the assessed children, 13% had a disability and 14% were handicapped, which are much higher frequencies than those found in the general population. Handicaps were due mainly to abnormalities of neuromotor function, mental development, or language and speech development. Compared with the handicap frequency in the same cohort at two years of age, a more favourable outcome at five years of age was seen in 10%, and a less favourable outcome in 7% of the children. The findings show that most of those high-risk children survived without handicap or serious disability at preschool age.


The Lancet | 1989

MORBIDITY OF VERY LOW BIRTHWEIGHT INFANTS AT CORRECTED AGE OF TWO YEARS IN A GEOGRAPHICALLY DEFINED POPULATION: Report from Project On Preterm and Small for Gestational Age Infants in the Netherlands

TheaM. van Zeben-van der Aa; S. Pauline Verloove-Vanhorick; Ronald Brand; J.H. Ruys

In a nationwide prospective survey on very preterm and very-low-birthweight infants in the Netherlands, a neurodevelopmental assessment was made at the corrected age of two years in a virtually complete population. The study achieved a 97.4% follow-up rate. A major handicap was found in 59 children and a minor handicap in 111 children (4.4% and 8.3% of liveborn infants, respectively). Unlike mortality, handicap was apparently unrelated to gestational age or birthweight.


Acta Paediatrica | 1993

Prediction of height achievement at five years of age in children born very preterm or with very low birth weight: continuation of catch-up growth after two years of age

E. Qvigstad; S.P. Verloove-Vanhorick; M.H. Ens-Dokkum; Anneke M. Schreuder; Sylvia Veen; Ronald Brand; W. Oostdijk; J.H. Ruys

To predict height at five years in a cohort of 565 very preterm and/or very low‐birth‐weight children, hypothesized growth determinants were subjected to discriminant analysis. Many neonatal parameters were not significantly associated with short stature at five years of age. A correct classification of stature (smaller/larger than the 10th percentile at five years of age) could be obtained in 85% of children, using the following variables: height at two years of age; total (or mid) parental height; parental level of education; length at one year of age; hypertension during pregnancy; sex; weight at two years of age; length percentile at one year of age. However, when compared to actual longitudinal data, the false‐positive rate was 37%. The survey also demonstrated the continuing catch‐up growth in very preterm and very low‐birth‐weight infants after two years of age.


European Journal of Pediatrics | 1987

Cerebral blood flow velocity pattern in healthy and asphyxiated newborns: a controlled study.

F van Bel; M. van de Bor; Theo Stijnen; J. Baan; J.H. Ruys

In a controlled study serial determinations of cerebral blood flow velocity using Doppler ultrasound and repeated real-time ultrasonographic- or computerized axial tomographic studies of the brain were performed in 17 (nearly) full-term newborns who experienced perinatal asphyxia and in 17 healthy matched controls during the first week of life. A higher cerebral blood flow velocity was found during the first 4 days of life, indicating a lower cerebrovascular resistance in the asphyxiated infants compared to the control infants. These haemodynamic changes coincided with cerebral oedema and neurological abnormalities. It is speculated that the changes in the cerebral circulation in asphyxiated infants are at least partly caused by cerebral oedema-induced increase of intracranial pressure due to severe perinatal asphyxia. Serial Doppler ultrasound investigations of the brain may be a useful non-invasive method for early detection and follow-up of the consequences of severe perinatal asphyxia.


Vox Sanguinis | 1990

Management of Severe Hemolytic Disease with Ultrasound-Guided Intravascular Fetal Transfusions

H. H. H. Kanhai; J. Bennebroek Gravenhorst; I. L. Kamp; R.H. Meerman; Anneke Brand; M.W.A. Dohmen‐Feld; J.H. Ruys

Abstract. Between January 1987 and March 1989, 22 fetuses with severe hemolytic disease were treated with 64 ultrasound‐guided intrauterine intravascular transfusions. Eighteen infants survived and are doing well. In 12 fetuses, hydropic changes were present at the first transfusion; 9 of these survived. In 8 of the 10 fetuses with a gestational age < 26 weeks, intrauterine treatment was successful.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 1988

Blood flow velocity pattern of the anterior cerebral arteries. Before and after drainage of posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus in the newborn.

F van Bel; M. van de Bor; J. Baan; Theo Stijnen; J.H. Ruys

The blood flow velocity pattern of the anterior cerebral artery (ACA) was investigated using transcutaneous Doppler technique in ten preterm infants with posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus (PHH), before and after drainage of cerebrospinal fluid. The pulsatility index of the ACA was elevated during PHH, mainly due to an increase of peak systolic flow velocity, explained by an increased compliance of the vascular wall. The end diastolic flow velocity and the area under the velocity curve were not different before and after drainage, indicating that cerebrovascular resistance was not changed and blood flow through the ACA was not affected in the studied infants during PHH.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 1989

Twenty-two years of intra-uterine intraperitoneal transfusions

J. Bennebroek Gravenhorst; H. H. H. Kanhai; R.H. Meerman; J.H. Ruys; J.G. Eernisse; Th.J. Stroes; K. van Nieuwaal

Over a period of 22 years, 154 fetuses were treated with 270 intra-uterine intraperitoneal transfusions. The patients were divided into three groups, according to the period they were treated. The overall percentage of surviving infants increased from 33% during the first period to 58% in the last period. In the group of infants that were not hydropic at the time of the first transfusion, the survival rate increased from 35 to 83%. In the group of children that were hydropic during the first transfusion, the survival rate during the first and last period was 24 and 42%, respectively. The percentage of fetuses that needed their first transfusion before the 26th week of pregnancy increased from 15 to 32% during the study period. Only 13% of these children survived. Lately, the intravascular approach has been introduced. Intravascular transfusions seem to be very effective, especially in early pregnancies and in hydropic fetuses. Application of the two techniques each in the most appropriate situation might offer optimal results for the near future.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 1991

Maternal hypertension and very preterm infants' mortality and handicaps☆

Dorothea M. van Zeben-van der Aa; Robert A. Verwey; S. Pauline Verloove-Vanhorick; Ronald Brand; J.H. Ruys

In a nationwide survey on liveborn very preterm and/or very low birthweight infants in The Netherlands, mortality and handicaps at the corrected age of 2 years were studied in infants born to mothers with or without hypertensive disorders during pregnancy. The neonatal and in-hospital mortality was significantly lower in infants born to hypertensive mothers. In surviving infants, a similar handicap rate was found at the corrected age of 2 years for both groups.


European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 1972

Failure of fetography to detect esophageal atresia

J. Bennebroek Gravenhorst; A. Sikkel; R.H. Gevers; J.H. Ruys; P.E.R. Rhemrev; M. Helfferich; P.F. Wiesenhaan

Abstract The possibility of an esophagotracheal anastomosis excludes the feasibility of diagnosing or refuting esophageal atresia as a cause of polyhydramnios.


The Lancet | 1986

Neonatal mortality risk in relation to gestational age and birthweight. Results of a national survey of preterm and very-low-birthweight infants in the Netherlands.

S. Pauline Verloove-Vanhorick; Robert A. Verwey; Ronald Brand; J. Bennebroek Gravenhorst; Marc J. N. C. Keirse; J.H. Ruys

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Ronald Brand

Leiden University Medical Center

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M. van de Bor

Leiden University Medical Center

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Theo Stijnen

Leiden University Medical Center

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J. Baan

Leiden University Medical Center

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