Ballantyne Angela O, Spilkin Amy M, Hesselink John, Trauner Doris A
Department of Neurosciences, School of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0935, USA.
Brain. 2008 Nov;131(Pt 11):2975-85. doi: 10.1093/brain/awn176. Epub 2008 Aug 12.
The developing brain has the capacity for a great deal of plasticity. A number of investigators have demonstrated that intellectual and language skills may be in the normal range in children following unilateral perinatal stroke. Questions have been raised, however, about whether these skills can be maintained at the same level as the brain matures. This study aimed to examine the stability of intellectual, academic and language functioning during development in children with perinatal stroke, and to resolve the inconsistencies raised in previous studies. Participants were 29 pre-school to school-age children with documented unilateral ischaemic perinatal stroke and 24 controls. Longitudinal testing of intellectual and cognitive abilities was conducted at two time points. Study 1 examined IQ, academic skills and language functions using the same test version over the test-retest interval. Study 2 examined IQ over a longer test-retest interval (pre-school to school-age), and utilized different test versions. This study has resulted in important new findings. There is no evidence of decline in cognitive function over time in children with perinatal unilateral brain damage. These results indicate that there is sufficient ongoing plasticity in the developing brain following early focal damage to result in the stability of cognitive functions over time. Also, the presence of seizures limits plasticity such that there is not only significantly lower performance on intellectual and language measures in the seizure group (Study 1), but the course of cognitive development is significantly altered (as shown in Study 2). This study provides information to support the notion of functional plasticity in the developing brain; yields much-needed clarification in the literature of prognosis in children with early ischaemic perinatal stroke; provides evidence that seizures limit plasticity during development; and avoids many of the confounds in prior studies. A greater understanding of how children with ischaemic perinatal stroke fare over time is particularly important, as there has been conflicting information regarding prognosis for this population. It appears that when damage is sustained very early in brain development, cerebral functional reorganization acts to sustain a stable rate of development over time.
发育中的大脑具有很强的可塑性。许多研究人员已经证明,单侧围产期中风后的儿童,其智力和语言技能可能处于正常范围。然而,随着大脑成熟,这些技能能否维持在同一水平引发了一些问题。本研究旨在探讨围产期中风儿童在发育过程中智力、学业和语言功能的稳定性,并解决先前研究中提出的不一致问题。研究对象为29名有单侧缺血性围产期中风记录的学龄前至学龄儿童和24名对照组儿童。在两个时间点对智力和认知能力进行纵向测试。研究1在重测间隔期使用相同的测试版本来检测智商、学业技能和语言功能。研究2在更长的重测间隔期(从学龄前到学龄)检测智商,并使用不同的测试版本。这项研究得出了重要的新发现。没有证据表明围产期单侧脑损伤儿童的认知功能会随时间下降。这些结果表明,早期局灶性损伤后发育中的大脑具有足够的持续可塑性,从而使认知功能随时间保持稳定。此外,癫痫发作会限制可塑性,以至于癫痫组在智力和语言测试中的表现不仅显著更低(研究1),而且认知发展过程也会显著改变(如研究2所示)。本研究提供了信息来支持发育中大脑功能可塑性的概念;对早期缺血性围产期中风儿童预后的文献进行了急需的澄清;提供了癫痫发作会限制发育过程中可塑性的证据;并避免了先前研究中的许多混淆因素。更好地了解缺血性围产期中风儿童随时间的情况尤为重要,因为关于这一人群的预后存在相互矛盾的信息。似乎当大脑发育很早时就受到损伤,脑功能重组会随着时间维持稳定的发育速度。