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Subtypes of behavioral functioning in 8–12 year old very preterm children

Authors :
Aleid G. van Wassenaer-Leemhuis
Anton H. van Kaam
Jaap Oosterlaan
Carolien A. van Houdt
Cornelieke S.H. Aarnoudse-Moens
Clinical Neuropsychology
IBBA
APH - Mental Health
Graduate School
ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development
Other Research
General Paediatrics
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry & Psychosocial Care
Neonatology
Pediatric surgery
Source :
van Houdt, C A, Oosterlaan, J, Aarnoudse-Moens, C S H, van Kaam, A H & van Wassenaer-Leemhuis, A G 2020, ' Subtypes of behavioral functioning in 8–12 year old very preterm children ', Early Human Development, vol. 142, 104968 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2020.104968, Early Human Development, 142:104968, 1-7. Elsevier Ireland Ltd, van Houdt, C A, Oosterlaan, J, Aarnoudse-Moens, C S H, van Kaam, A H & van Wassenaer-Leemhuis, A G 2020, ' Subtypes of behavioral functioning in 8–12 year old very preterm children ', Early Human Development, vol. 142, 104968, pp. 1-7 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2020.104968, Early human development, 142:104968. Elsevier Ireland Ltd, Early Human Development, 142:104968. Elsevier Ireland Ltd
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Background: Very preterm children often have difficulties in behavioral functioning, but there is large heterogeneity in the severity of these difficulties and in the combination of the difficulties observed. Few studies so far addressed this heterogeneity by examining whether more homogeneous subtypes of behavioral functioning can be identified. Aims: To identify behavioral subtypes in a group of very preterm children, examine whether such subtypes are related to neonatal medical complications and/or parental education level (to better understand origins) and to examine whether such subtypes are associated with IQ and neurocognitive deficits in attention and executive function (to study underlying mechanisms of dysfunction). Study design: Cross-sectional cohort study. Subjects: 135 very preterm (gestational age < 30 weeks and/or birthweight < 1000 g) children aged 8–12 years. Measures: Parent and teacher questionnaires covering a broad range of behavioral domains, parental education level, neonatal medical complications, short-form Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-III and performance-based attention and executive function measures. Results: Cluster analysis indicated two behavioral subtypes: a subtype characterized by low behavioral problems (76% of children) and a subtype characterized by high behavioral problems across behavioral domains (24% of children). Lower parental education level, lower IQ and poorer verbal working memory, visuospatial working memory and inhibition were associated with the high problems subtype, but neonatal medical complications were not. Conclusions: The majority of very preterm children was assigned to the low behavioral problems subtype. However, if problems do occur, they are wide-spread across behavioral domains and accompanied by problems in neurocognitive domains.

Details

ISSN :
03783782
Volume :
142
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Early Human Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5dc00d4d0afff17d4a30df6a9a7502f0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2020.104968