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Profiles of Executive Function Across Children with Distinct Brain Disorders: Traumatic Brain Injury, Stroke, and Brain Tumor

Authors :
Erin D. Bigler
Mark T Mackay
Warren D. Lo
Kenneth H. Rubin
Alison Maree Gomes
Cynthia A. Gerhardt
Maureen Dennis
Keith Owen Yeates
Mardee Greenham
Christina G. Salley
Anne L Gordon
Kathryn Vannatta
Christine Koterba
Vicki Anderson
Gabriel C. Araujo
Tanya N. Antonini
H. Gerry Taylor
Source :
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society. 23:529-538
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2017.

Abstract

Objectives:This study examined whether children with distinct brain disorders show different profiles of strengths and weaknesses in executive functions, and differ from children without brain disorder.Methods:Participants were children with traumatic brain injury (N=82; 8–13 years of age), arterial ischemic stroke (N=36; 6–16 years of age), and brain tumor (N=74; 9–18 years of age), each with a corresponding matched comparison group consisting of children with orthopedic injury (N=61), asthma (N=15), and classmates without medical illness (N=68), respectively. Shifting, inhibition, and working memory were assessed, respectively, using three Test of Everyday Attention: Children’s Version (TEA-Ch) subtests: Creature Counting, Walk-Don’t-Walk, and Code Transmission. Comparison groups did not differ in TEA-Ch performance and were merged into a single control group. Profile analysis was used to examine group differences in TEA-Ch subtest scaled scores after controlling for maternal education and age.Results:As a whole, children with brain disorder performed more poorly than controls on measures of executive function. Relative to controls, the three brain injury groups showed significantly different profiles of executive functions. Importantly, post hoc tests revealed that performance on TEA-Ch subtests differed among the brain disorder groups.Conclusions:Results suggest that different childhood brain disorders result in distinct patterns of executive function deficits that differ from children without brain disorder. Implications for clinical practice and future research are discussed. (JINS, 2017,23, 529–538)

Details

ISSN :
14697661 and 13556177
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....18199b7132faf5a104098d075c186d31
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s1355617717000364