Effect of Cerebral Lesions on Continuous Performance Test Responses of School Age Children Born Prematurely

Male Developmental Disabilities Leukomalacia, Periventricular Infant, Newborn Infant, Premature, Diseases Neuropsychological Tests Severity of Illness Index Cerebral Ventricles 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Predictive Value of Tests Risk Factors Humans Attention Female Child Cerebral Hemorrhage Follow-Up Studies
DOI: 10.1093/jpepsy/21.6.841-a Publication Date: 2011-06-15T04:47:06Z
ABSTRACT
Examined attention skills, as measured by the Continuous Performance Test (CPT), in a group of 64 children born premature and 40 full-term children, ages 6 to 8 years. Premature children were classified by neonatal cerebral lesions into no lesion, mild lesion, and severe lesion groups. It was predicted that severity of lesion would be associated with CPT performance. While mean differences among the groups of prematures did not reach significance, children with severe lesions made significantly more errors of omission and commission than the full-term comparison group. Children with mild lesions were poorer than full terms in errors of commission. Children with no lesions also made more errors of omission and commission than full terms, suggesting attention deficits secondary to prematurity even in the absence of identified brain lesion. With increasing severity of lesion, increasing percentages of each group were found to perform more than 2 SD below the mean in errors of commission. Results suggest that premature children, with and without identified lesions, are at risk for attention deficits.
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