Semenkovich K, Patel P P, Pollock A B, Beach K A, Nelson S, Masterson J J, Hershey T, Arbeláez A M
Departments of Pediatrics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Department of Occupational Therapy, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Diabet Med. 2016 May;33(5):668-73. doi: 10.1111/dme.12854. Epub 2015 Aug 16.
To determine if children and young people aged < 23 years with Type 1 diabetes differ in academic ability from age-matched control subjects without Type 1 diabetes and whether academic scores are related to glycaemic control.
Using a cross-sectional study design, we administered cognitive and academic tests (Woodcock-Johnson III Spatial Relations, General Information, Letter-Word Recognition, Calculation and Spelling tests) to young people with Type 1 diabetes (n=61) and control subjects (n=26) aged 9-22 years. The groups did not differ in age or gender. Participants with Type 1 diabetes had a disease duration of 5-17.7 years. History of glycaemic control (HbA1c , diabetic ketoacidosis and severe hypoglycaemic episodes) was obtained via medical records and interviews.
The participants with Type 1 diabetes had a lower mean estimated verbal intelligence (IQ) level compared with those in the control group (P=0.04). Greater exposure to hyperglycaemia over time was associated with lower spelling abilities within the group with Type 1 diabetes (P=0.048), even after controlling for age, gender, socio-economic status, blood glucose level at time of testing and verbal IQ (P=0.01). History of severe hypoglycaemia or ketoacidosis was not associated with differences in academic abilities.
In children and young people, Type 1 diabetes was associated with a lower verbal IQ. Moreover, increased exposure to hyperglycaemia was associated with lower spelling performance. These results imply that hyperglycaemia can affect cognitive function and/or learning processes that may affect academic achievement.
确定年龄小于23岁的1型糖尿病儿童和青少年在学业能力方面是否与年龄匹配的非1型糖尿病对照受试者存在差异,以及学业成绩是否与血糖控制相关。
采用横断面研究设计,我们对61名9至22岁的1型糖尿病青少年和26名对照受试者进行了认知和学业测试(伍德科克-约翰逊III空间关系、一般信息、字母-单词识别、计算和拼写测试)。两组在年龄和性别上无差异。1型糖尿病参与者的病程为5至17.7年。通过病历和访谈获取血糖控制史(糖化血红蛋白、糖尿病酮症酸中毒和严重低血糖发作)。
与对照组相比,1型糖尿病参与者的平均估计言语智力(IQ)水平较低(P=0.04)。即使在控制了年龄、性别、社会经济地位、测试时的血糖水平和言语智商后,1型糖尿病组中随着时间推移更多地暴露于高血糖与较低的拼写能力相关(P=0.048,P=0.01)。严重低血糖或酮症酸中毒史与学业能力差异无关。
在儿童和青少年中,1型糖尿病与较低的言语智商相关。此外,更多地暴露于高血糖与较低的拼写表现相关。这些结果表明,高血糖可能会影响认知功能和/或学习过程,进而可能影响学业成绩。