Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition, Sainte-Justine University Hospital Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Dis Esophagus. 2013 May-Jun;26(4):392-400. doi: 10.1111/dote.12056.
Esophageal atresia (EA) occurs in one out of 2500 to 4500 live births. As the vast majority of infants are now surviving neonatal corrective surgery, the focus has shifted from mortality to morbidity associated with EA. However, little is known about its psychological morbidity. This paper synthesizes research and clinical evidence to highlight the psychological sequelae of EA, including its impact on parents' psychological functioning and its effects on child development from infancy to adulthood. Whether it is discovered at birth or prenatally, EA is a psychologically traumatic event, and parents are at risk for developing traumatic stress reactions following diagnosis. Neonatal surgery and intensive care, risk of complications, associated anomalies, and genetic etiologies multiply risk for parents' acute and post-traumatic stress disorders (PTSD). Parental PTSD has a negative impact on infant and child development through its effects on parenting skills and parent-child interactions. EA children are also at risk for PTSD because of invasive and stressful procedures they undergo during the neonatal period. Consequences of EA can have an important long-term impact on children's psychological and social development. The scant studies pertaining to cognitive functioning suggest that EA does not affect mental development during infancy, but may be associated with deficits as children reach school age. Long-term sequelae are unclear because psychological functioning in adults has not yet been adequately examined. Research and clinical evidence of psychological morbidity associated with EA has implications for clinical practice. Psychological support for parents must begin during the neonatal period and should continue as an integral component of long-term follow up for both children and parents. Support is best provided within the context of a multidisciplinary treatment team that follows patients from birth through childhood and adolescence. Psychological follow up should continue into adulthood, as patients grow up and transition from pediatric to adult health-care settings.
食管闭锁(EA)在 2500 至 4500 例活产儿中发生一例。由于绝大多数婴儿现在都能存活下来并接受新生儿矫正手术,因此关注的焦点已从死亡率转移到与 EA 相关的发病率。然而,人们对其心理发病率知之甚少。本文综合了研究和临床证据,重点介绍了 EA 的心理后遗症,包括其对父母心理功能的影响以及对婴儿期到成年期儿童发育的影响。无论是在出生时还是产前发现,EA 都是一个心理创伤事件,父母在诊断后有发生创伤后应激反应的风险。新生儿手术和重症监护、并发症风险、相关畸形和遗传病因都会增加父母急性和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的风险。父母 PTSD 通过对育儿技能和亲子互动的影响,对婴儿和儿童的发育产生负面影响。EA 儿童在新生儿期也会因侵入性和应激性程序而面临 PTSD 的风险。EA 的后果可能对儿童的心理和社会发展产生重要的长期影响。关于认知功能的少数研究表明,EA 不会影响婴儿期的精神发育,但在儿童达到学龄时可能与缺陷有关。长期后遗症尚不清楚,因为尚未充分检查成年人的心理功能。与 EA 相关的心理发病率的研究和临床证据对临床实践具有重要意义。必须在新生儿期开始为父母提供心理支持,并应作为儿童和父母长期随访的一个组成部分继续提供。支持最好在多学科治疗团队的背景下提供,该团队从出生到儿童期和青春期一直跟踪患者。心理随访应持续到成年期,因为患者长大后并从儿科过渡到成人保健环境。