“Previously, we went by the EEG pattern when the baby was six hours old, which sometimes meant interrupting life-sustaining interventions,” says Boubou Hallberg, paediatrician and researcher at the Department of Clinical Sciences, Intervention and Technology (CLINTEC), Karolinska Institutet. “Now we know that the values can be normalised for up to 48 hours with brain cooling treatment, greatly reducing the risk of serious damage.”

Boubou Hallberg is a clinician at the neonatal intensive care unit at Karolinska University Hospital, Huddinge. The research he presents in his doctoral thesis forms much of the basis of the recent changes in the way babies born with acute hypoxia are treated, and one of Europe’s most modern unit for neonatal intensive care is now being built in Huddinge. But his findings have also been of major significance in other countries.

Babies who are brain damaged on account of asphyxia often develop motor disabilities, such as cerebral palsy (CP). Boubou Hallberg shows in his thesis that surprisingly many, including those who have no motor deficiencies, also develop cognitive problems, such as ADHD, language disorders and difficulties processing impressions.

“The child must therefore be monitored until at least the age of six,” he says. “They might need suppotive training and special needs teachers when they start school.”

About 120 babies a year develop severe brain injury in Sweden owing to childbirth asphyxia. For several years now, national guidelines have been in place for treating children using hypothermia therapy, whereby the body temperature is reduced to 33.5 degrees for 72 hours. Boubou Hallberg shows that despite these guidelines, there are considerable national differences as regards how the method is applied.

Doctoral thesis: “Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy – Diagnosis, Hypothermia Treatment and Outcome”, Boubou Hallberg, CLINTEC, Karolinska Institutet. The defence will take place on Friday 21 May 2010.

For more information, please contact:

Dr Boubou Hallberg
Tel: +46(0)8-585 813 54 or +46(0)70-484 59 43 (mobile)
Email: Boubou.Hallberg@ki.se

Press Officer Katarina Sternudd
Tel: +46 (0)8-524 838 95
Email: katarina.sternudd@ki.se
Web: http://ki.se

Karolinska Institutet is one of the world’s leading medical universities. Its mission is to contribute to the improvement of human health through research and education. Karolinska Institutet accounts for over 40 per cent of the medical academic research conducted in Sweden, and offers the country’s broadest range of education in medicine and health sciences. Since 1901 the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet has selected the Nobel laureates in Physiology or Medicine.

CAPTION: Boubou Hallberg, photo by Sandra Hegestam