Shaw P, Weingart D, Bonner T, Watson B, Park M T M, Sharp W, Lerch J P, Chakravarty M M
Section on Neurobehavioral Clinical Research,Social and Behavioral Research Branch,National Human Genome Research Institute,Bethesda, MD,USA.
Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry,Western University,London,Canada.
Psychol Med. 2016 Aug;46(11):2363-73. doi: 10.1017/S0033291716000660. Epub 2016 Jun 10.
When children have marked problems with motor coordination, they often have problems with attention and impulse control. Here, we map the neuroanatomic substrate of motor coordination in childhood and ask whether this substrate differs in the presence of concurrent symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
Participants were 226 children. All completed Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition (DSM-5)-based assessment of ADHD symptoms and standardized tests of motor coordination skills assessing aiming/catching, manual dexterity and balance. Symptoms of developmental coordination disorder (DCD) were determined using parental questionnaires. Using 3 Tesla magnetic resonance data, four latent neuroanatomic variables (for the cerebral cortex, cerebellum, basal ganglia and thalamus) were extracted and mapped onto each motor coordination skill using partial least squares pathway modeling.
The motor coordination skill of aiming/catching was significantly linked to latent variables for both the cerebral cortex (t = 4.31, p < 0.0001) and the cerebellum (t = 2.31, p = 0.02). This effect was driven by the premotor/motor cortical regions and the superior cerebellar lobules. These links were not moderated by the severity of symptoms of inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity. In categorical analyses, the DCD group showed atypical reduction in the volumes of these regions. However, the group with DCD alone did not differ significantly from those with DCD and co-morbid ADHD.
The superior cerebellar lobules and the premotor/motor cortex emerged as pivotal neural substrates of motor coordination in children. The dimensions of these motor coordination regions did not differ significantly between those who had DCD, with or without co-morbid ADHD.
当儿童存在明显的运动协调问题时,他们往往也存在注意力和冲动控制方面的问题。在此,我们描绘儿童期运动协调的神经解剖学基础,并探究在存在注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)并发症状的情况下,这一基础是否有所不同。
参与者为226名儿童。所有人均完成了基于《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM - 5)的ADHD症状评估以及评估瞄准/接球、手部灵巧性和平衡能力的运动协调技能标准化测试。使用父母问卷确定发育性协调障碍(DCD)的症状。利用3特斯拉磁共振数据,提取四个潜在神经解剖变量(针对大脑皮层、小脑、基底神经节和丘脑),并使用偏最小二乘路径模型将其映射到每项运动协调技能上。
瞄准/接球的运动协调技能与大脑皮层(t = 4.31,p < 0.0001)和小脑(t = 2.31,p = 0.02)的潜在变量均显著相关。这种效应由运动前区/运动皮层区域和小脑上小叶驱动。这些联系不受注意力不集中、多动和冲动症状严重程度的影响。在分类分析中,DCD组这些区域的体积出现非典型性减小。然而,单纯患有DCD的组与患有DCD且合并ADHD的组之间没有显著差异。
小脑上小叶和运动前区/运动皮层成为儿童运动协调的关键神经基础。这些运动协调区域的维度在患有DCD的儿童中,无论是否合并ADHD,均无显著差异。