Cargando…

Prevalence, and Intellectual Outcome of Unilateral Focal Cortical Brain Damage as a Function of Age, Sex and Aetiology

Neurologists and neuropsychologists are aware that aging men are more at risk than women for brain damage, principally because of the well known male-predominant risk for cardiovascular disease and related cerebrovascular accidents. However, a disproportion in prevalence of brain damage between the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Braun, C. M. J., Montour-Proulx, I., Daigneault, S., Rouleau, I., Kuehn, S., Piskopos, M., Desmarais, G., Lussier, F., Rainville, C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: IOS Press 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5507119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12446950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2002/634764
_version_ 1783249692291760128
author Braun, C. M. J.
Montour-Proulx, I.
Daigneault, S.
Rouleau, I.
Kuehn, S.
Piskopos, M.
Desmarais, G.
Lussier, F.
Rainville, C.
author_facet Braun, C. M. J.
Montour-Proulx, I.
Daigneault, S.
Rouleau, I.
Kuehn, S.
Piskopos, M.
Desmarais, G.
Lussier, F.
Rainville, C.
author_sort Braun, C. M. J.
collection PubMed
description Neurologists and neuropsychologists are aware that aging men are more at risk than women for brain damage, principally because of the well known male-predominant risk for cardiovascular disease and related cerebrovascular accidents. However, a disproportion in prevalence of brain damage between the sexes in childhood may be less suspected. Furthermore, sex-specific risk for other aetiologies of brain damage may be little known, whether in the pediatric or adult populations. Proposals of a sex difference in cognitive recovery from brain damage have also been controversial. Six hundred and thirty five “consecutive” cases with cortical focal lesions including cases of all ages and both sexes were reviewed. Aetiology of the lesion was determined for each case as was postlesion IQ. Risk was highly male prevalent in all age groups, with a predominance of cardiovascular aetiology explaining much of the adult male prevalence. However, several other aetiological categories were significantly male prevalent in juveniles (mitotic, traumatic, dysplasic) and adults (mitotic, traumatic). There was no sex difference in outcome (i.e., postlesion IQ) of these cortical brain lesions for the cohort as a whole, after statistical removal of the influence of lesion extent, aetiology and presence of epilepsy. Mechanisms potentially responsible for sex differences in prevalence, aetiology of brain damage, and recovery, are reviewed and discussed.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5507119
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2002
publisher IOS Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-55071192017-07-26 Prevalence, and Intellectual Outcome of Unilateral Focal Cortical Brain Damage as a Function of Age, Sex and Aetiology Braun, C. M. J. Montour-Proulx, I. Daigneault, S. Rouleau, I. Kuehn, S. Piskopos, M. Desmarais, G. Lussier, F. Rainville, C. Behav Neurol Other Neurologists and neuropsychologists are aware that aging men are more at risk than women for brain damage, principally because of the well known male-predominant risk for cardiovascular disease and related cerebrovascular accidents. However, a disproportion in prevalence of brain damage between the sexes in childhood may be less suspected. Furthermore, sex-specific risk for other aetiologies of brain damage may be little known, whether in the pediatric or adult populations. Proposals of a sex difference in cognitive recovery from brain damage have also been controversial. Six hundred and thirty five “consecutive” cases with cortical focal lesions including cases of all ages and both sexes were reviewed. Aetiology of the lesion was determined for each case as was postlesion IQ. Risk was highly male prevalent in all age groups, with a predominance of cardiovascular aetiology explaining much of the adult male prevalence. However, several other aetiological categories were significantly male prevalent in juveniles (mitotic, traumatic, dysplasic) and adults (mitotic, traumatic). There was no sex difference in outcome (i.e., postlesion IQ) of these cortical brain lesions for the cohort as a whole, after statistical removal of the influence of lesion extent, aetiology and presence of epilepsy. Mechanisms potentially responsible for sex differences in prevalence, aetiology of brain damage, and recovery, are reviewed and discussed. IOS Press 2002 2002-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5507119/ /pubmed/12446950 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2002/634764 Text en Copyright © 2002 Hindawi Publishing Corporation. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Other
Braun, C. M. J.
Montour-Proulx, I.
Daigneault, S.
Rouleau, I.
Kuehn, S.
Piskopos, M.
Desmarais, G.
Lussier, F.
Rainville, C.
Prevalence, and Intellectual Outcome of Unilateral Focal Cortical Brain Damage as a Function of Age, Sex and Aetiology
title Prevalence, and Intellectual Outcome of Unilateral Focal Cortical Brain Damage as a Function of Age, Sex and Aetiology
title_full Prevalence, and Intellectual Outcome of Unilateral Focal Cortical Brain Damage as a Function of Age, Sex and Aetiology
title_fullStr Prevalence, and Intellectual Outcome of Unilateral Focal Cortical Brain Damage as a Function of Age, Sex and Aetiology
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence, and Intellectual Outcome of Unilateral Focal Cortical Brain Damage as a Function of Age, Sex and Aetiology
title_short Prevalence, and Intellectual Outcome of Unilateral Focal Cortical Brain Damage as a Function of Age, Sex and Aetiology
title_sort prevalence, and intellectual outcome of unilateral focal cortical brain damage as a function of age, sex and aetiology
topic Other
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5507119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12446950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2002/634764
work_keys_str_mv AT brauncmj prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology
AT montourproulxi prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology
AT daigneaults prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology
AT rouleaui prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology
AT kuehns prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology
AT piskoposm prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology
AT desmaraisg prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology
AT lussierf prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology
AT rainvillec prevalenceandintellectualoutcomeofunilateralfocalcorticalbraindamageasafunctionofagesexandaetiology