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The Neurobehavioral Phenotype of School-Aged, Very Prematurely Born Children with No Serious Neurological Sequelae: A Quality of Life Predictor

School-aged extremely preterm (EPT) children have multiple specific neurocognitive/behavioral disorders that are often associated with other disorders; this manifests a true neurobehavioral “phenotype” of prematurity. To determine a profile of cognitive/behavioral impairments in a population of scho...

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Autores principales: Tosello, Barthélémy, Méziane, Sahra, Resseguier, Noémie, Marret, Stéphane, Cambonie, Gilles, Zahed, Meriem, Brévaut-Malaty, Véronique, Beltran Anzola, Any, Gire, Catherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8622308/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34828656
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children8110943
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author Tosello, Barthélémy
Méziane, Sahra
Resseguier, Noémie
Marret, Stéphane
Cambonie, Gilles
Zahed, Meriem
Brévaut-Malaty, Véronique
Beltran Anzola, Any
Gire, Catherine
author_facet Tosello, Barthélémy
Méziane, Sahra
Resseguier, Noémie
Marret, Stéphane
Cambonie, Gilles
Zahed, Meriem
Brévaut-Malaty, Véronique
Beltran Anzola, Any
Gire, Catherine
author_sort Tosello, Barthélémy
collection PubMed
description School-aged extremely preterm (EPT) children have multiple specific neurocognitive/behavioral disorders that are often associated with other disorders; this manifests a true neurobehavioral “phenotype” of prematurity. To determine a profile of cognitive/behavioral impairments in a population of school-aged EPT children (7–10 years-old) without major disabilities, a cross-sectional study was conducted in five medical centers. An algorithm distributed the study population according to four WISC-IV subtests, five NEPSY-2 subtests, and two variables of figure of Rey. The behavior (SDQ), anxiety (Spielberg STAI-C), and generic QoL (Kidscreen 10 and VSP-A) were also evaluated. The study included 231 school-aged EPT children. Three neurobehavioral “phenotypes” were defined according to their severity: 1 = moderately, 2 = minor, and 3 = unimpaired. In all the profiles, the working memory, perceptual reasoning, as well as mental flexibility, were close to or below average, and their emotional behavior was always troubled. Self-esteem and school-work were the most impacted QoL areas. The unimpaired neurobehavior exhibited emotional behavioral impairment and executive dysfunction. The profile analysis defined distinct outcome groups and provided an informative means of identifying factors related to developmental outcomes. The QoL deterioration is determined by the severity of the three neurobehavioral “phenotypes”, which is defined as well as by dysexecutive and/or behavioral disorders.
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spelling pubmed-86223082021-11-27 The Neurobehavioral Phenotype of School-Aged, Very Prematurely Born Children with No Serious Neurological Sequelae: A Quality of Life Predictor Tosello, Barthélémy Méziane, Sahra Resseguier, Noémie Marret, Stéphane Cambonie, Gilles Zahed, Meriem Brévaut-Malaty, Véronique Beltran Anzola, Any Gire, Catherine Children (Basel) Review School-aged extremely preterm (EPT) children have multiple specific neurocognitive/behavioral disorders that are often associated with other disorders; this manifests a true neurobehavioral “phenotype” of prematurity. To determine a profile of cognitive/behavioral impairments in a population of school-aged EPT children (7–10 years-old) without major disabilities, a cross-sectional study was conducted in five medical centers. An algorithm distributed the study population according to four WISC-IV subtests, five NEPSY-2 subtests, and two variables of figure of Rey. The behavior (SDQ), anxiety (Spielberg STAI-C), and generic QoL (Kidscreen 10 and VSP-A) were also evaluated. The study included 231 school-aged EPT children. Three neurobehavioral “phenotypes” were defined according to their severity: 1 = moderately, 2 = minor, and 3 = unimpaired. In all the profiles, the working memory, perceptual reasoning, as well as mental flexibility, were close to or below average, and their emotional behavior was always troubled. Self-esteem and school-work were the most impacted QoL areas. The unimpaired neurobehavior exhibited emotional behavioral impairment and executive dysfunction. The profile analysis defined distinct outcome groups and provided an informative means of identifying factors related to developmental outcomes. The QoL deterioration is determined by the severity of the three neurobehavioral “phenotypes”, which is defined as well as by dysexecutive and/or behavioral disorders. MDPI 2021-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC8622308/ /pubmed/34828656 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children8110943 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Tosello, Barthélémy
Méziane, Sahra
Resseguier, Noémie
Marret, Stéphane
Cambonie, Gilles
Zahed, Meriem
Brévaut-Malaty, Véronique
Beltran Anzola, Any
Gire, Catherine
The Neurobehavioral Phenotype of School-Aged, Very Prematurely Born Children with No Serious Neurological Sequelae: A Quality of Life Predictor
title The Neurobehavioral Phenotype of School-Aged, Very Prematurely Born Children with No Serious Neurological Sequelae: A Quality of Life Predictor
title_full The Neurobehavioral Phenotype of School-Aged, Very Prematurely Born Children with No Serious Neurological Sequelae: A Quality of Life Predictor
title_fullStr The Neurobehavioral Phenotype of School-Aged, Very Prematurely Born Children with No Serious Neurological Sequelae: A Quality of Life Predictor
title_full_unstemmed The Neurobehavioral Phenotype of School-Aged, Very Prematurely Born Children with No Serious Neurological Sequelae: A Quality of Life Predictor
title_short The Neurobehavioral Phenotype of School-Aged, Very Prematurely Born Children with No Serious Neurological Sequelae: A Quality of Life Predictor
title_sort neurobehavioral phenotype of school-aged, very prematurely born children with no serious neurological sequelae: a quality of life predictor
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8622308/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34828656
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children8110943
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