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Cognitive functioning, neurologic status and brain imaging in classical galactosemia.

Authors :
Kaufman FR
McBride-Chang C
Manis FR
Wolff JA
Nelson MD
Source :
European journal of pediatrics [Eur J Pediatr] 1995; Vol. 154 (7 Suppl 2), pp. S2-5.
Publication Year :
1995

Abstract

A historical group of 45 children (4-18 years) and adults (18-39 years) with classical galactosemia had deficits of cognitive function that were variable and not related to the age at diagnosis or to severity of illness at presentation. There was a trend for patients to score highest on visual processing tasks. The standardized tests of speech and memory skills fell within the same range as the Broad Cognitive Ability score, indicating that the speech and language deficits may be part of a more global set of cognitive impairments. Scores on the Beery Visual Motor Integration and Block Design Tests fell in approximately the same range as other cognitive abilities. In addition, there was a high incidence of abnormality detected on MRI and 12 patients had neurologic symptoms that included ataxia, tremor and dysmetria. These abnormalities did not correlate with the age at diagnosis, severity of illness at presentation or scores on cognitive testing. The pathophysiology of neurologic and neuropsychologic impairments remains unknown. Since these appear to be unrelated to the duration of galactose exposure, other factors impacting on outcome need to be understood so that strategies can be developed to improve what appears to be a global impairment of cognitive function.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0340-6199
Volume :
154
Issue :
7 Suppl 2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of pediatrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
7671958
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02143794