Institute for Neuroscience and Muscle Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Discipline of Child and Adolescent Health, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Dev Med Child Neurol. 2018 Jul;60(7):703-710. doi: 10.1111/dmcn.13768. Epub 2018 Apr 18.
This cross-sectional study aimed to examine the preliteracy abilities of young children with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) and to identify which of these abilities best predicted conventional literacy (spelling).
Forty-two children with NF1 (23 males, 19 females; mean age [SD] 5y 6mo [6mo]) were compared with 32 unaffected children (15 males, 17 females; mean age [SD] 5y 4mo [6mo]). All children completed a comprehensive cognitive assessment including measures of phonological processing (phonological awareness, phonological memory, rapid automatic naming) and letter-sound knowledge.
Children with NF1 performed significantly poorer than the comparison group across all cognitive and preliteracy domains, with specific weaknesses evident in phonological awareness (F =14.13, p<0.001, partial η =0.17), phonological memory (F =13.87, p<0.001, partial η =0.17), and letter-sound knowledge (F =5.65, p=0.020, partial η =0.07). Within the group with NF1 group, over a third of children demonstrated impairment in at least one phonological processing domain and the risk of phonological impairment was 5.60 times that of unaffected children. Children's letter-sound knowledge was the strongest predictor of conventional literacy (spelling).
This study establishes that preliteracy deficits are present and detectable in young children with NF1. As a result of the high incidence of preliteracy impairment, we recommend screening phonological awareness and letter-sound knowledge to identify risk of future learning disorders.
Young children with neurofibromatosis type 1 are at elevated risk of preliteracy deficits. The most affected domains are phonological awareness and phonological memory. Letter-sound knowledge is the strongest predictor of conventional literacy (spelling).
本横断面研究旨在探讨 1 型神经纤维瘤病(NF1)患儿的前读写能力,并确定哪些能力最能预测常规读写(拼写)。
将 42 例 NF1 患儿(男 23 例,女 19 例;平均年龄[标准差]5 岁 6 个月[6 个月])与 32 例无影响儿童(男 15 例,女 17 例;平均年龄[标准差]5 岁 4 个月[6 个月])进行比较。所有儿童均完成了全面的认知评估,包括语音处理(语音意识、语音记忆、快速自动命名)和字母-声音知识的测量。
NF1 组患儿在所有认知和前读写领域的表现均明显低于对照组,在语音意识(F=14.13,p<0.001,偏η=0.17)、语音记忆(F=13.87,p<0.001,偏η=0.17)和字母-声音知识(F=5.65,p=0.020,偏η=0.07)方面存在明显弱点。在 NF1 组中,超过三分之一的儿童在至少一个语音处理领域存在障碍,且语音障碍的风险是无影响儿童的 5.60 倍。儿童的字母-声音知识是常规读写(拼写)的最强预测指标。
本研究证实,NF1 患儿存在且可检测到前读写缺陷。由于前读写障碍的发生率较高,我们建议对语音意识和字母-声音知识进行筛查,以识别未来学习障碍的风险。
1 型神经纤维瘤病患儿存在前读写能力缺陷,风险较高。受影响最严重的领域是语音意识和语音记忆。字母-声音知识是常规读写(拼写)的最强预测指标。