Neuropsychological assessment and perinatal risk: A study amongst very premature born 4- and 5-year old children
•Born very premature 4–5 years of age present worse development in executive, visual-perceptive, learning, memory, language, and attention abilities.•The Perinatal Risk Index evaluation at hospital discharge appears to predict their subsequent development on visual-perceptive tasks at 4–5 years old....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Research in developmental disabilities 2017-10, Vol.69, p.116-123 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Born very premature 4–5 years of age present worse development in executive, visual-perceptive, learning, memory, language, and attention abilities.•The Perinatal Risk Index evaluation at hospital discharge appears to predict their subsequent development on visual-perceptive tasks at 4–5 years old.•The predictive of PERI could be useful to develop a standard protocol to plan future interventions for these children.
Prematurity and its consequences are serious problems that can result in numerous neurosensory disabilities and cerebral cognitive dysfunctions. The Perinatal Risk Index (PERI) might provide a predictive measure of these problems.
This study compared the cognitive development of prematurely born children at 4 and 5 years of age with age-matched peers born at term. The secondary objective was to determine whether a correlation exists between perinatal risk and performance on neuropsychological tests among premature children.
A total of 54 children between four and five years of age were evaluated; 27 were born very premature (premature group; PG), and 27 were born at term (term group; TG). Executive function, attention, memory, language, visual perception, and spatial structuring were evaluated. Subtests from the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, the Rey Complex Figure Test, the McCarthy Scales of Children’s Abilities, the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Test A, Trails A and B, the spatial structuring questionnaire from the Child Neuropsychological Maturity Questionnaire, and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children were used. A PERI score was also obtained for the PG.
The PG showed significantly lower scores than the TG in all the studied cognitive domains. Visual-perceptive scores were significantly and negatively correlated with the PERI scores of the PG.
The PG showed neurocognitive deficits compared with the TG. The PERI can be used to predict the development of visual-perceptive abilities in children between four and five years of age. |
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ISSN: | 0891-4222 1873-3379 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ridd.2017.08.008 |