Dionne Ginette, Boivin Michel, Séguin Jean R, Pérusse Daniel, Tremblay Richard E
Research Unit on Psychosocial Maladjustment in Children, bSchool of Psychology, Laval University, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.
Pediatrics. 2008 Nov;122(5):e1073-9. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-3028.
Previous studies have suggested that language is affected in infants of diabetic mothers, yet there have been no systematic investigations to address this question.
Our goal was to compare infants of diabetic mothers and controls on language outcomes from ages 18 months to 7 years.
This was a case-control longitudinal design with 2 birth cohorts: 1835 singletons from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development (born October 1997 to July 1998) and 998 twins from the Quebec Newborn Twin Study (born November 1995 to July 1998). Cases were 221 infants of diabetic mothers (105 singletons and 116 twins), and controls were 2612 children (1730 singletons and 882 twins) for whom at least 1 language measure from ages 18 months to 7 years was available. Exclusion criteria were gestation of <32 weeks. The outcome measures were McArthur Communicative Development Inventory expressive and receptive vocabulary and grammar at 18 months and 30 months, the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test receptive vocabulary at 48 months and expressive and receptive vocabulary at 60 months, and Early Development Instrument teacher-assessed communication at 72 months and 84 months (kindergarten and first grade). RESULTS. Analyses of variance (controlling for gender, socioeconomic status, and perinatal factors) revealed effects of gestational diabetes on expressive language at 18, 30, and 72/84 months. Infants of diabetic mothers scored 0.27 to 0.41 SD lower than controls and were 2.2 times more at risk of a language impairment. Genes and maternal education both moderated the effect of gestational diabetes on expressive language during this period.
Gestational diabetes hinders expressive language in offspring into middle childhood. Genes are strongly associated with the risk of delays in infants of diabetic mothers, and offspring of educated mothers are less affected.
先前的研究表明,患有糖尿病母亲的婴儿的语言能力会受到影响,但尚未有系统性的调查来解决这一问题。
我们的目标是比较患有糖尿病母亲的婴儿和对照组在18个月至7岁期间的语言发育结果。
这是一项病例对照纵向研究设计,有两个出生队列:来自魁北克儿童发展纵向研究的1835名单胎婴儿(1997年10月至1998年7月出生)和来自魁北克新生儿双胞胎研究的998对双胞胎(1995年11月至1998年7月出生)。病例为221名患有糖尿病母亲的婴儿(105名单胎和116对双胞胎),对照组为2612名儿童(1730名单胎和882对双胞胎),他们在18个月至7岁期间至少有一项语言测量数据。排除标准为孕周小于32周。结果测量指标包括18个月和30个月时的麦克阿瑟沟通发展量表表达性和接受性词汇及语法、48个月时的皮博迪图片词汇测试接受性词汇、60个月时的表达性和接受性词汇,以及72个月和84个月(幼儿园和一年级)时的早期发展工具教师评估沟通能力。结果。方差分析(控制性别、社会经济地位和围产期因素)显示,妊娠期糖尿病对18、30和72/84个月时的表达性语言有影响。患有糖尿病母亲的婴儿得分比对照组低0.27至0.41个标准差,语言障碍风险高出2.2倍。在此期间,基因和母亲教育程度均调节了妊娠期糖尿病对表达性语言的影响。
妊娠期糖尿病会阻碍后代到童年中期的表达性语言发展。基因与患有糖尿病母亲的婴儿出现发育迟缓的风险密切相关,而受过教育的母亲的后代受影响较小。