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Parasympathetic Functions in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder

The overall goal of this study was to determine if parasympathetic nervous system (PsNS) activity is a significant biomarker of sensory processing difficulties in children. Several studies have demonstrated that PsNS activity is an important regulator of reactivity in children, and thus, it is of in...

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Autores principales: Schaaf, Roseann C., Benevides, Teal, Blanche, Erna Imperatore, Brett-Green, Barbara A., Burke, Janice P., Cohn, Ellen S., Koomar, Jane, Lane, Shelly J., Miller, Lucy Jane, May-Benson, Teresa A., Parham, Diane, Reynolds, Stacey, Schoen, Sarah A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2839854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20300470
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnint.2010.00004
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author Schaaf, Roseann C.
Benevides, Teal
Blanche, Erna Imperatore
Brett-Green, Barbara A.
Burke, Janice P.
Cohn, Ellen S.
Koomar, Jane
Lane, Shelly J.
Miller, Lucy Jane
May-Benson, Teresa A.
Parham, Diane
Reynolds, Stacey
Schoen, Sarah A.
author_facet Schaaf, Roseann C.
Benevides, Teal
Blanche, Erna Imperatore
Brett-Green, Barbara A.
Burke, Janice P.
Cohn, Ellen S.
Koomar, Jane
Lane, Shelly J.
Miller, Lucy Jane
May-Benson, Teresa A.
Parham, Diane
Reynolds, Stacey
Schoen, Sarah A.
author_sort Schaaf, Roseann C.
collection PubMed
description The overall goal of this study was to determine if parasympathetic nervous system (PsNS) activity is a significant biomarker of sensory processing difficulties in children. Several studies have demonstrated that PsNS activity is an important regulator of reactivity in children, and thus, it is of interest to study whether PsNS activity is related to sensory reactivity in children who have a type of condition associated with sensory processing disorders termed sensory modulation dysfunction (SMD). If so, this will have important implications for understanding the mechanisms underlying sensory processing problems of children and for developing intervention strategies to address them. The primary aims of this project were: (1) to evaluate PsNS activity in children with SMD compared to typically developing (TYP) children, and (2) to determine if PsNS activity is a significant predictor of sensory behaviors and adaptive functions among children with SMD. We examine PsNS activity during the Sensory Challenge Protocol; which includes baseline, the administration of eight sequential stimuli in five sensory domains, recovery, and also evaluate response to a prolonged auditory stimulus. As a secondary aim we examined whether subgroups of children with specific physiological and behavioral sensory reactivity profiles can be identified. Results indicate that as a total group the children with severe SMD demonstrated a trend for low baseline PsNS activity, compared to TYP children, suggesting this may be a biomarker for SMD. In addition, children with SMD as a total group demonstrated significantly poorer adaptive behavior in the communication and daily living subdomains and in the overall Adaptive Behavior Composite of the Vineland than TYP children. Using latent class analysis, the subjects were grouped by severity and the severe SMD group had significantly lower PsNS activity at baseline, tones and prolonged auditory. These results provide preliminary evidence that children who demonstrate severe SMD may have physiological activity that is different from children without SMD, and that these physiological and behavioral manifestations of SMD may affect a child's ability to engage in everyday social, communication, and daily living skills.
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spelling pubmed-28398542010-03-17 Parasympathetic Functions in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder Schaaf, Roseann C. Benevides, Teal Blanche, Erna Imperatore Brett-Green, Barbara A. Burke, Janice P. Cohn, Ellen S. Koomar, Jane Lane, Shelly J. Miller, Lucy Jane May-Benson, Teresa A. Parham, Diane Reynolds, Stacey Schoen, Sarah A. Front Integr Neurosci Neuroscience The overall goal of this study was to determine if parasympathetic nervous system (PsNS) activity is a significant biomarker of sensory processing difficulties in children. Several studies have demonstrated that PsNS activity is an important regulator of reactivity in children, and thus, it is of interest to study whether PsNS activity is related to sensory reactivity in children who have a type of condition associated with sensory processing disorders termed sensory modulation dysfunction (SMD). If so, this will have important implications for understanding the mechanisms underlying sensory processing problems of children and for developing intervention strategies to address them. The primary aims of this project were: (1) to evaluate PsNS activity in children with SMD compared to typically developing (TYP) children, and (2) to determine if PsNS activity is a significant predictor of sensory behaviors and adaptive functions among children with SMD. We examine PsNS activity during the Sensory Challenge Protocol; which includes baseline, the administration of eight sequential stimuli in five sensory domains, recovery, and also evaluate response to a prolonged auditory stimulus. As a secondary aim we examined whether subgroups of children with specific physiological and behavioral sensory reactivity profiles can be identified. Results indicate that as a total group the children with severe SMD demonstrated a trend for low baseline PsNS activity, compared to TYP children, suggesting this may be a biomarker for SMD. In addition, children with SMD as a total group demonstrated significantly poorer adaptive behavior in the communication and daily living subdomains and in the overall Adaptive Behavior Composite of the Vineland than TYP children. Using latent class analysis, the subjects were grouped by severity and the severe SMD group had significantly lower PsNS activity at baseline, tones and prolonged auditory. These results provide preliminary evidence that children who demonstrate severe SMD may have physiological activity that is different from children without SMD, and that these physiological and behavioral manifestations of SMD may affect a child's ability to engage in everyday social, communication, and daily living skills. Frontiers Research Foundation 2010-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2839854/ /pubmed/20300470 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnint.2010.00004 Text en Copyright © 2010 Schaaf, Benevides, Blanche, Brett-Green, Burke, Cohn, Koomar, Lane, Miller, May-Benson, Parham, Reynolds and Schoen. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Schaaf, Roseann C.
Benevides, Teal
Blanche, Erna Imperatore
Brett-Green, Barbara A.
Burke, Janice P.
Cohn, Ellen S.
Koomar, Jane
Lane, Shelly J.
Miller, Lucy Jane
May-Benson, Teresa A.
Parham, Diane
Reynolds, Stacey
Schoen, Sarah A.
Parasympathetic Functions in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder
title Parasympathetic Functions in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder
title_full Parasympathetic Functions in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder
title_fullStr Parasympathetic Functions in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder
title_full_unstemmed Parasympathetic Functions in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder
title_short Parasympathetic Functions in Children with Sensory Processing Disorder
title_sort parasympathetic functions in children with sensory processing disorder
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2839854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20300470
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnint.2010.00004
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