Institute of Medical Psychology, University Hospital Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Transplantation. 2010 Dec 27;90(12):1567-73. doi: 10.1097/tp.0b013e3181fe1398.
Liver-transplanted children have an increased risk for serious developmental problems. We examined attention and executive functioning and their relation to intelligence and several disease-related variables after transplantation.
This is a monocentric, cross-sectional study with no reference group. Children's mean age at transplantation was 3.4+/-3.8 years (n=137, age 10.2+/-3.8 years). Assessment included attention and executive functioning (Test of Attentional Performance [TAP]/Test of Attentional Performance [children's version] [KITAP]) and intelligence (Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, 3rd edition/Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children).
In most TAP and KITAP Subscales, children scored in the lower normal range, but reaction times, errors, and omissions were significantly below the population mean. Most notable deficits became manifest in the subscales Sustained Attention and Working Memory where 47% respectively 38% of the present sample scored below the normal range. Most TAP and KITAP Subscales, particularly Alertness and Go/NoGo, were highly correlated with Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, 3rd edition and Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children Subscales indicating that liver-transplanted children with longer reaction times display lower intelligence scores. Regression analysis revealed that decelerated reaction times in the subscales TAP-Go/NoGo, Divided Attention (KITAP and TAP), and KITAP-Sustained Attention were associated with type of donation, duration of disease, age at transplantation, and sex (R²=0.14 to R²=0.25).
Results provide evidence suggesting that liver-transplanted children are at risk of developmental deficits regarding attention and executive functioning. Especially intrinsic alertness and working memory performance seem to be insufficient. This might result in deficient initiating, sustaining, and controlling of action. In summary, results demonstrate the need for an early and comprehensive developmental screening after pediatric liver transplantation.
肝移植儿童发生严重发育问题的风险增加。我们研究了肝移植后儿童的注意力和执行功能及其与智力和几种疾病相关变量的关系。
这是一项单中心、横断面研究,无对照组。患儿的平均移植年龄为 3.4+/-3.8 岁(n=137,年龄 10.2+/-3.8 岁)。评估包括注意力和执行功能(注意力测试[TAP]/儿童注意力测试[KITAP])和智力(韦氏儿童智力量表第三版/考夫曼儿童评估量表)。
在大多数 TAP 和 KITAP 分量表中,儿童的得分处于正常范围的较低水平,但反应时间、错误和遗漏明显低于人群平均值。最明显的缺陷表现在持续性注意力和工作记忆子量表中,其中 47%和 38%的样本得分低于正常范围。大多数 TAP 和 KITAP 分量表,特别是警觉性和 Go/NoGo,与韦氏儿童智力量表第三版和考夫曼儿童评估量表的分量表高度相关,这表明反应时间较长的肝移植儿童的智力得分较低。回归分析显示,TAP-Go/NoGo、分散注意力(KITAP 和 TAP)和 KITAP-持续性注意力子量表中的减速反应时间与供体类型、疾病持续时间、移植年龄和性别有关(R²=0.14 至 R²=0.25)。
研究结果表明,肝移植儿童在注意力和执行功能方面存在发育缺陷的风险。特别是内在警觉性和工作记忆表现似乎不足。这可能导致行为的启动、维持和控制不足。总之,研究结果表明,在小儿肝移植后需要进行早期和全面的发育筛查。