Raz Sarah, Newman Julie Bapp, DeBastos Angela K, Peters Brittany N, Batton Daniel G
Department of Psychology, Wayne State University.
Division of Pediatric Neuropsychology, Children's National Medical Center.
Neuropsychology. 2014 Mar;28(2):188-201. doi: 10.1037/neu0000038. Epub 2013 Dec 23.
Compromised postnatal growth is an important risk factor accounting for poorer neuropsychological performance of preterm children during the preschool years, yet its unique contribution to explaining outcome variance within this high risk group has yet to be determined. Therefore, we examined within a large preterm sample (1) the relationships between head growth, measured either at birth or preschool age, and outcome; (2) the relationships of binary versus dimensional head growth measures and performance; and (3) the unique contribution of preschool-age head growth, after adjustment for general physical development (indexed by stature), to variance in neuropsychological functioning.
We evaluated 264 preterm (<36 weeks) preschoolers, without severe handicaps, using cognitive, language, and motor skill measures. Multiple regression analyses, adjusting for sociodemographic factors and pre-, peri-, and postnatal confounds, were used to study associations between growth indices and performance.
While suboptimal head growth classification at birth was significantly associated only with motor performance, suboptimal head growth at preschool age explained a significant portion of variance in intellectual and language measures (g = .46 to .60). Treating preschool head size as a continuous dimension yielded null results, however, with body-height explaining a significant portion of the variance across several domains.
Among postnatal anthropometric indices, preschool stature, rather than head circumference, remains a consistent correlate of preschool outcome in preterm children, highlighting the contribution of general physical development to neuropsychological performance. Further investigation of the underlying mechanisms likely involves exploration of complex relationships between postnatal nutrition, growth hormone levels, body and brain development, and neuropsychological functioning.
出生后生长发育受限是导致早产儿童在学龄前神经心理表现较差的一个重要风险因素,但其在解释这一高危群体的结果差异方面的独特作用尚未确定。因此,我们在一个大型早产样本中研究了以下内容:(1)出生时或学龄前测量的头部生长与结果之间的关系;(2)头部生长的二元测量与维度测量和表现之间的关系;(3)在调整了一般身体发育(以身高为指标)后,学龄前头部生长对神经心理功能差异的独特贡献。
我们使用认知、语言和运动技能测量方法对264名无严重残疾的早产(<36周)学龄前儿童进行了评估。采用多元回归分析,并对社会人口统计学因素以及产前、产时和产后的混杂因素进行了调整,以研究生长指标与表现之间的关联。
虽然出生时头部生长欠佳的分类仅与运动表现显著相关,但学龄前头部生长欠佳解释了智力和语言测量中很大一部分差异(g = 0.46至0.60)。然而,将学龄前头围视为一个连续维度时,结果为零,而身高解释了多个领域中很大一部分差异。
在出生后的人体测量指标中,学龄前身高而非头围仍然是早产儿童学龄前结果的一个一致相关因素,突出了一般身体发育对神经心理表现的贡献。对潜在机制的进一步研究可能涉及探索出生后营养、生长激素水平、身体和大脑发育以及神经心理功能之间的复杂关系。