Baker R C, Kummer A W, Schultz J R, Ho M, Gonzalez del Rey J
Division of General Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Ohio, USA.
Clin Pediatr (Phila). 1996 Jun;35(6):295-301. doi: 10.1177/000992289603500602.
We prospectively evaluated the neurodevelopmental outcome of infants with documented viral meningitis to determine (1) whether deficits in physical growth, development, speech and language, hearing, or intelligence occur; and (2) if so, at what age these deficits can be detected. Sixteen infants with documented enteroviral meningitis under the age of 90 days and a control group of 13 patients matched for age, race, sex, and socioeconomic status were followed up prospectively for 3 years with annual evaluations, which included a developmental evaluation by a pediatric developmentalist, articulation and language tests by a speech-language pathologist (Sequenced Inventory of Communication Development, Receptive-Expressive Emergent Language Scale (REEL), Preschool Language Scale (PLS), Revised Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT-R), Photo Articulation Test, audiometric screening), and intelligence tests by a psychometrist (Bayley Scales of Infant Development [BSID] and Stanford-Binet). No deficits were demonstrated in growth, development, hearing, BSID, articulation, and expressive language. Subtle but significant (P < 0.05) deficits were documented in the study group compared with the control group in the receptive component of the REEL, all subsections of the PLS, the PPVT-R, and the verbal comprehension/language-processing section (Factor II) of the Stanford-Binet. These differences could be reliably detected by 3 years of age. We conclude that viral meningitis in young infants may cause subtle deficits in language skills, particularly receptive language. We recommend that children who have had enteroviral meningitis during early infancy be monitored carefully for language development and, perhaps, receive increased language stimulation in the home prior to school entry in order to optimize their learning potential.
我们对确诊为病毒性脑膜炎的婴儿的神经发育结局进行了前瞻性评估,以确定:(1) 是否存在身体生长、发育、言语和语言、听力或智力方面的缺陷;(2) 如果存在,这些缺陷在什么年龄可以被检测到。对16例年龄在90天以下确诊为肠道病毒性脑膜炎的婴儿以及13例年龄、种族、性别和社会经济地位相匹配的对照组患者进行了为期3年的前瞻性随访,每年进行评估,评估内容包括由儿科发育专家进行的发育评估、言语语言病理学家进行的发音和语言测试(沟通发展顺序量表、接受-表达性语言出现量表[REEL]、学前语言量表[PLS]、修订版皮博迪图片词汇测试[PPVT-R]、图片发音测试、听力筛查)以及心理测量师进行的智力测试(贝利婴儿发育量表[BSID]和斯坦福-比奈智力量表)。在生长、发育、听力、BSID、发音和表达性语言方面未发现缺陷。与对照组相比,研究组在REEL的接受部分、PLS的所有子部分、PPVT-R以及斯坦福-比奈智力量表的言语理解/语言处理部分(因子II)存在细微但显著(P < 0.05)的缺陷。这些差异在3岁时能够被可靠地检测到。我们得出结论,幼儿期的病毒性脑膜炎可能会导致语言技能方面的细微缺陷,尤其是接受性语言。我们建议,对婴儿期早期患过肠道病毒性脑膜炎的儿童应密切监测其语言发育情况,并且在入学前或许应在家庭中增加语言刺激,以优化他们的学习潜力。