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Hand Preference and Cognitive, Motor, and Behavioral Functioning in 10-Year-Old Extremely Preterm Children

Authors :
Megan Lloyd
Richard A. Ehrenkranz
Judith Klarr
Jennifer DeRidder
Anjali Sadhwani
Jackie Friedman
Rachana Singh
Deborah Klein
Gary Stainback
Julie Vanier Rollins
Wendy Burdo-Hartman
Susan Barron
Echo Meyer
Aimee Asgarian
Sarah Nota
Steve Pastyrnak
Katarzyna Chawarska
Ellen C. Perrin
Brian Dessureau
Karl C.K. Kuban
Susan Dieterich
Brandi Henson
Joni McKeeman
Janice Ware
Beth Powers
Anne Smith
Karen Bearrs
Rugile Ramoskaite
Ellen Waldrep
Elizabeth N. Allred
Emily Neger
Jenifer Walkowiak
Michael E. Msall
Deborah Weiland
Elaine Romano
Kathy Tsatsanis
Patricia Lee
Kathryn Mattern
Scott J. Hunter
Bhavesh Shah
Sophy Kim
Ryan Martin
Suzanne Wiggins
Jill Damon-Minow
Jean A. Frazier
Nancy Darden-Saad
Janice Wereszczak
Molly Wood
T. Michael O'Shea
Nancy Peters
Rachel Wilson
Janice Bernhardt
Robert M. Joseph
Jennifer Benjamin
Ann Foley
Barbara Prendergast
Susan McQuiston
Laurie M. Douglass
Lauren Venuti
Kelly Vogt
Debbie Allred
Kirsten McGhee
Megan Scott
Peter J. Anderson
Beth Kring
Alice C. Burnett
Taryn Coster
Alan Leviton
Gail Hounshell
Stephen C. Engelke
Madeleine Lenski
Diane Warner
Krissy Washington
Julie Rathbun
Teri Crumb
Patricia Brown
Emily Ansusinha
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics. 195
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The association of hand preference (left, mixed, and right) with cognitive, academic, motor, and behavioral function was evaluated in 864 extremely preterm children at 10 years of age. Left-handed and right-handed children performed similarly but mixed-handed children had greater odds of functional deficits across domains than right-handed children.

Details

ISSN :
10976833
Volume :
195
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a3fcbec92787b8855579090adc56d1c6