The discourse of 91 children who had sustained severe
(n = 68) or mild (n = 23) closed head
injury (CHI) was examined at least three years postinjury.
The groups' retellings of a narrative story were analyzed
according to two domains, information and language. In
comparison to the mild CHI group, the severe group produced
stories characterized by reduced content and information,
impaired organization, fewer words, and less complex sentences.
The relationships between discourse production and the
groups' performance on measures of language, executive
function, memory, and processing speed were examined. Correlations
were found between discourse production and general verbal
ability including verbal fluency. Correlations were also
found for discourse performance and executive function
measures associated with problem solving and working memory.
Site and extent of lesion were not useful in predicting
discourse production. These findings indicate that children
who sustain a severe closed head injury during early to
middle childhood are at risk for persisting deficits in
discourse processing and other cognitive abilities. (JINS,
2000, 6, 741–751)
This study evaluated a large sample (N = 90) of 5- to 7-year-old children with hydrocephalus caused by aqueductal stenosis or prematurity-intraventricular hemorrhage or associated with spina bifida. Comparison groups of normal controls, children with spina bifida and no shunt, and premature children with no hydrocephalus were also evaluated. Comparison of skill discrepancies at two occasions separated by 1 year revealed that hydrocephalic children, as a group, showed poorer nonverbal than verbal skills on measures from the McCarthy Scales of Children's Abilities, the WISC-R, and composites of neuropsychological skills. No discrepancies in verbal-nonverbal memory were found nor were any discrepancies attributable to etiology or motor demands of the tasks. Consistent with current hypotheses concerning the role of the cerebral white matter in cognitive development, these results show that hydrocephalic children in this age range generally have poorer development of nonverbal cognitive skills relative to their language development.
The effects of early hydrocephalus and related brain anomalies on cognitive skills are not well understood. In this study, magnetic resonance scans were obtained from 99 children aged from 6 to 13 years with either shunted hydrocephalus (n = 42) or arrested (unshunted) hydrocephalus (n = 19), from patient controls with no hydrocephalus (n = 23), and from normal, nonpatient controls (n = 15). Lateral ventricle volumes and area measurements of the internal capsules and centra semiovale in both hemispheres were obtained from these scans, along with area measurements of the corpus callosum. Results revealed reductions in the size of the corpus callosum in the shunted hydrocephalus group. In addition, lateral ventricle volumes were larger and internal capsule areas were smaller in both hemispheres in children with shunted and arrested hydrocephalus. The centra semiovale measurements did not differentiate the groups. Correlating these measurements with concurrent assessments of verbal and nonverbal cognitive skills, motor abilities, and executive functions revealed robust relationships only between the area of the corpus callosum and nonverbal cognitive skills and motor abilities. These results support the theory of a prominent role for the corpus callosum defects characteristic of many children with shunted hydrocephalus in the spatial cognition deficits commonly observed in these children.
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