Understanding creatine for neurological health in babies (UNICORN): an observational cohort study
Nhi T. Tran, Mary J. Berry, Melissa Schlegel, Alison Sheppard, Damien L. Callahan, Miranda L. Davies-Tuck, Natalie Holowko, Rod W. Hunt, David W. Walker, Rod J. Snow, Stacey J. Ellery

TL;DR
This study examines creatine levels in preterm infants and their link to neurological outcomes, finding that creatine levels drop with age and vary based on nutrition.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel observational cohort to assess creatine's role in neurological health of preterm infants.
Findings
Cord blood creatine levels are not influenced by gestational age at birth.
Blood creatine concentrations decrease significantly with postnatal age.
Extremely preterm infants have notably lower creatine levels by hospital discharge compared to other groups.
Abstract
Creatine is essential for brain development. UNICORN is an observational study designed to assess creatine levels in preterm infants, examine creatine availability through nutrition in the weeks after preterm birth, and correlate preterm creatine levels with neurological outcomes. Infants were recruited at CCDHB in Wellington, New Zealand. Cord blood samples were collected at birth. Serial blood, urine and nutrition samples were collected for preterm babies between birth and hospital discharge. Creatine concentrations were measured using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). A subset of babies underwent a brain magnetic resonance imaging/proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRI/1H-MRS) at term corrected age (CA) and neurodevelopmental evaluation with a general movements assessment at three months CA. Sixty-seven babies (extremely preterm >28 weeks gestational…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMuscle metabolism and nutrition
