When a parent opens their baby’s MRI report and reads the phrase “restricted diffusion in the basal ganglia and thalami” or “abnormal signal in the posterior limb of the internal capsule,” the first instinct is to search those terms online. The results can feel overwhelming. Basal ganglia and thalamic (BGT) injury on a neonatal MRI is a specific finding with specific implications, and families deserve a clear explanation of what it does and does not predict. This guide walks through what these structures do, why they were injured, what the pattern means for your child’s future, and what rehabilitation should look like.
What the Basal Ganglia and Thalami Do
The basal ganglia are a group of deep brain structures that include the putamen, caudate nucleus, and globus pallidus. They work closely with the thalami, which sit at the center of each brain hemisphere and act as relay stations for sensory, motor, and cognitive information. Together, these deep gray matter structures:
- Coordinate smooth voluntary movement and posture.
- Regulate muscle tone (whether muscles are loose or tight).
- Suppress unwanted involuntary movements.
- Contribute to learning motor skills, habit formation, and emotional regulation.
- Relay information between the cortex and other brain regions.
These structures are metabolically the busiest parts of the term newborn brain. They consume oxygen and glucose at high rates, which is exactly why they are vulnerable when the oxygen supply is cut off acutely.
Why BGT Injury Happens in HIE
Brain injury patterns on HIE MRI follow distinctive distributions that reflect how oxygen deprivation occurred:
| Injury Pattern | Typical Cause | Brain Regions Affected |
|---|---|---|
| Basal ganglia / thalamus (BGT) | Acute near-total asphyxia (sentinel event) | Putamen, thalamus, PLIC, perirolandic cortex |
| Watershed / parasagittal | Prolonged partial asphyxia (slow, incomplete) | Cortical border zones, white matter between major arterial territories |
| Global | Very severe, prolonged asphyxia | Widespread cortex, deep structures, brainstem |
BGT injury is the pattern associated with acute near-total asphyxia. These are events where oxygen supply is severely reduced over a short period (minutes, not hours). Typical causes include cord prolapse, placental abruption, uterine rupture, sustained fetal bradycardia, or maternal cardiorespiratory collapse. In these events, the metabolically hungry deep gray matter runs out of reserves first, which is why the MRI later shows BGT-pattern injury.
What the Radiology Report Actually Describes
A neonatal MRI report describing BGT injury will typically mention some combination of these specific findings:
- T1 high signal in the putamen, thalamus, or globus pallidus.
- Abnormal T2 signal in the same structures.
- Restricted diffusion on DWI (bright on DWI, dark on ADC) in the deep gray matter during the first days after injury.
- Loss of the normal high T1 signal in the PLIC (posterior limb of the internal capsule).
- Involvement of the perirolandic cortex, the part of the cortex adjacent to the central sulcus.
The PLIC finding deserves specific attention. In healthy term newborns, the PLIC shows a bright T1 signal because it is already myelinated at birth. Loss of that normal PLIC signal on neonatal MRI is one of the single most prognostic findings in HIE imaging: it strongly predicts later motor impairment.
This is a specific and important pattern. A case review can help you understand the implications and whether the injury pattern suggests a preventable sentinel event.

What BGT Injury Predicts for Your Child
Martinez-Biarge and colleagues (2011, Neurology) published one of the most detailed studies connecting specific MRI patterns to neurodevelopmental outcomes in term HIE. Their findings, confirmed by later work including the NICHD cooling trial MRI analyses (Shankaran et al., 2012):
| MRI Finding | Typical Long-Term Picture |
|---|---|
| Normal or minimal BGT changes, normal PLIC | Favorable; often typical development |
| Mild-moderate BGT signal change, intact PLIC | Variable; possible mild dyskinesia, often preserved cognition |
| Moderate-severe BGT injury, abnormal PLIC | Dyskinetic CP, motor disability, possible feeding and speech difficulties |
| Global injury (BGT + extensive cortex + white matter) | Severe combined motor and cognitive disability |
Importantly, cognition is often more preserved than motor function in pure BGT injury. Many children with dyskinetic cerebral palsy have significant physical disability but typical or near-typical cognition, which can make communication and educational support especially important.
Dyskinetic cerebral palsy: what it looks like
Children with dyskinetic CP have a mixture of involuntary movements. The main features are dystonia (sustained muscle contractions causing twisting postures), athetosis (slow, writhing movements), and chorea (brief irregular movements). Movements often worsen with attempted voluntary action or emotional stress. Muscle tone fluctuates; it is not consistently high or low. Feeding and speech are commonly affected because oral and laryngeal muscles are involved. Many children benefit from augmentative communication devices, feeding therapy, and medications for dystonia.
Therapeutic Hypothermia and BGT Injury
Cooling reduces the overall risk of death or severe disability after HIE, but it does not fully prevent established injury. When a baby arrives with acute near-total asphyxia and evolving BGT injury, cooling can reduce the extent of secondary injury but may not reverse the damage that occurred in the minutes around the sentinel event. Shankaran and colleagues (2012) demonstrated that MRI findings in cooled babies still correlate with neurodevelopmental outcome at 18 to 22 months. A cooled baby with BGT injury typically has better outcomes than an uncooled baby with the same MRI pattern, but the MRI still drives much of the prognosis.
Rehabilitation and Follow-up After BGT Injury
When a baby has BGT injury on MRI, coordinated long-term follow-up is essential. The typical recommended team:
When BGT Injury Suggests a Preventable Event
BGT injury is a signature of acute near-total asphyxia. When this pattern appears on MRI, the case review almost always focuses on whether the precipitating event was recognized and acted on in time:
- Was a sentinel event (cord prolapse, placental abruption, uterine rupture) documented?
- Was sudden sustained fetal bradycardia recognized and treated?
- How long was the decision-to-incision interval?
- Was resuscitation at birth prompt and appropriate?
- Was cord blood gas obtained, and did it show severe acidemia?
- Did the baby meet cooling criteria, and was cooling started within 6 hours?
A careful case review pulls together the fetal monitoring strip, nursing notes, operative records, cord gases, resuscitation record, and the MRI pattern. BGT injury with a documented sentinel event and delayed response is one of the clearest patterns of a preventable HIE outcome.
How BGT injury is scored on MRI
Pediatric neuroradiologists often use formal scoring systems to grade the extent of BGT injury. The most widely used is the Barkovich scoring system, which grades basal ganglia and thalamic injury from 0 (normal) to 4 (severe involvement of putamen, thalamus, and internal capsule), and watershed injury separately from 0 to 5. A higher combined score correlates with worse neurodevelopmental outcome. The Weeke score (2018) is a more recent scoring system developed specifically for cooled babies and weights PLIC involvement heavily, consistent with decades of evidence that PLIC is the single most prognostic structure in a term HIE MRI. If your report includes a score, ask your pediatric neurologist to explain what it means and how it compares with other babies at the same age. Scoring does not replace clinical follow-up, but it provides a common language across centers.
What parents should ask after a BGT finding
If the radiology report mentions basal ganglia or thalamic injury, these are the questions worth asking your team:
- Which specific structures show injury (putamen, thalamus, globus pallidus, caudate)?
- Is the posterior limb of the internal capsule (PLIC) involved?
- Is there any associated cortical or watershed involvement?
- Was an MRI scoring system used, and if so, what was the score?
- On what day of life was the MRI done, and is a follow-up MRI planned?
- Does the pattern suggest an acute sentinel event, prolonged partial asphyxia, or a combination?
- What early intervention services should we start, and when?
- Which specialists (pediatric neurology, physiatry, orthopedics, feeding therapy) should follow my child, and how often?
- At what age can we expect more reliable predictions about function, and what milestones should we watch for?
Writing down the answers and keeping a binder of reports (MRI, EEG, aEEG, cord gases, discharge summary, early-intervention evaluations) is one of the most useful things parents can do in the first year. These records follow your child through every specialist visit and school meeting for years, and they are also the foundation of any legal review if one is pursued.
This pattern almost always traces back to a specific event. Understanding what happened and whether the response was timely is the center of any case review.




Related reading for parents
- When should an MRI be done after HIE? Timing, types, and what each shows
- Why an early MRI after HIE can look normal: understanding diffusion-weighted imaging
- What is aEEG? Continuous brain monitoring in the NICU explained for parents
- Standard EEG for newborns with HIE: what the results actually mean
- Neonatal encephalopathy vs HIE: understanding the terminology doctors use
Our team helps families in 38 states understand what specific MRI findings mean and whether injury traces back to a preventable event. No cost. Answers first.