With this review we identified a limited number of prospective studies that systematically addressed outcome in patients at the highest risk. These studies consistently revealed cognitive and motor delay in children after cardiac surgery during early infancy. Additional investigation is required to ascertain the consequences of such impairment during later childhood and into adult life.
Aim Clinically, preterm infants show motor delay and atypical postures compared with their peers born at term. A longitudinal cohort study was designed to describe the motor development of very preterm infants from 4 to 18 months corrected age (CA). The study was also designed to investigate how the atypical postures observed in early infancy in the preterm infants might be related to their later motor development. Here we report the findings in early motor skills from 4 to 8 months CA.
Method Early motor skills were assessed in 62 preterm infants (32 males, 30 females, mean gestation 26.94wks, SD 1.11) and 53 term infants (32 males, 21 females, mean gestation 39.55wks, SD 1.17) using the Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS).
Results The preterm infants demonstrated different motor behaviours from their term peers, with an uneven progression of motor skills in different positions from 4 to 8 months CA. At 8 months CA, 90%of the term infants were able to sit without arm support, but only 56%of the preterm infants could maintain sitting very briefly without arm support.
Interpretation This uneven progression may have been due to an imbalance between the active flexor and extensor strength and hence inadequate postural control in these positions. The AIMS has also been shown to be a valid assessment tool to demonstrate unique characteristics in movement quality in the preterm population.
The 'Uptimer' is a custom-made lightweight battery-operated remote activity monitor that records the amount of time an individual spends in the upright position, which is also known as 'uptime'. The aims of this study were to determine levels of uptime over 24 hours and the relation between uptime and a child's age, sex, height, weight, and body mass index (BMI). Uptime was recorded in 529 normally developing children (318 females, 211 males), aged between 8 and 15 years. All children wore an Uptimer continuously for a 24-hour period that included a typical school day. Mean uptime for children in this study was 5.4 hours (SD 1.3; range 1.5 to 10.3 hours), over a 24-hour period. Uptime followed approximately a normal distribution in this population and did not have a linear relation to age, height, weight, nor BMI. Results of this study may be used as a normative database for the evaluation of uptime in children with physical disabilities.
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