哥伦比亚儿童在COVID-19感染之前、期间和之后的神经行为症状的父母报告

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
NeuroRehabilitation Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-25 DOI:10.1177/10538135241312599
Sofia Catalina Arango-Lasprilla, Natalia Albaladejo-Blázquez, Jack D Watson, Oswaldo Moreno, Paul B Perrin, Rosario Ferrer-Cascales, Juan Carlos Arango-Lasprilla
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19对边缘化和服务不足社区的个体的影响尤为严重,很少有研究调查COVID-19如何影响拉丁美洲儿童的神经行为症状。很少有研究表明,COVID-19对神经行为症状有负面影响,而且对于年轻、受教育程度较低或患有其他慢性病的人来说,这种影响更严重。本研究的目的是检查COVID-19检测呈阳性的哥伦比亚儿童样本神经行为症状(之前、期间和之后)的变化,并确定COVID-19后神经行为障碍的关键预测因素。方法对哥伦比亚85名儿童(51.80%为女性)的护理人员(92.90%为女性)进行神经行为症状问卷调查。在儿童从COVID-19中康复后收集数据,并对儿童在COVID-19之前和期间以及收集数据时的功能进行回顾性调查。结果在域水平上,与COVID-19期间相比,护理人员报告的儿童躯体症状增加较多,情感症状增加中等,认知症状增加较少。护理人员还注意到,与COVID-19之前相比,儿童的躯体症状大幅增加,情感症状中度增加,认知症状小幅增加。躯体症状领域是感染后唯一看到改善的类别(感染期间vs感染后)。三个独立的线性回归表明,感染期间COVID-19严重程度越高,当前(在COVID-19之后)躯体症状严重程度越高,存在先前存在的呼吸道疾病显著预测当前认知和情感症状严重程度越高。本研究强调了评估和治疗哥伦比亚儿童covid -19后神经行为症状的重要性,并在服务不足和研究不足的人群中确定了这一需求。未来的研究可能会检查早期干预和康复策略是否有助于改善这一群体的covid -19后神经行为症状。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Parents' Reports of Colombian Children's Neurobehavioral Symptoms Before, During, and After COVID-19 Infection.

BackgroundCOVID-19 disproportionately affected individuals from marginalized and underserved communities, and little research has investigated how COVID-19 might have impacted neurobehavioral symptoms in children from Latin America. What little research suggests that COVID-19 had a negative effect on neurobehavioral symptoms and that this effect was worse for individuals who were younger, had lower education, or other chronic conditions.ObjectiveThe purpose of the current study was to examine the change (before, during, and after) in neurobehavioral symptoms for a sample of Colombian children who tested positive for COVID-19 and to identify key predictors of post-COVID neurobehavioral impairments.MethodsThe Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory was administered to caregivers (92.90% female) of 85 children (51.80% female) by researchers in Colombia. Data was collected after the child had recovered from COVID-19 with retrospective questions about the child's function before and during COVID-19, as well as at the time of data collection.ResultsAt the domain level, caregivers reported large increases in children's somatic symptoms, a medium increase in affective symptoms, and a small increase in cognitive symptoms before vs. during COVID-19. Caregivers also noted a large increase in children's somatic symptoms, a medium increase in affective symptoms, and a small increase in cognitive symptoms before vs after COVID-19. The somatic symptom domain was the only category to see an improvement following infection (during vs after). Three separate linear regressions indicated that greater COVID-19 severity during the infection significantly predicted greater current (after COVID-19) somatic symptom severity, and the presence of a pre-existing respiratory disease significantly predicted greater current cognitive and affective symptom severity.ConclusionThis study highlights the importance of evaluating and treating neurobehavioral symptoms post-COVID-19 among children in Colombia and identifies this need in an underserved and under-researched population. Future research may examine whether early intervention and rehabilitation strategies help improve post-COVID-19 neurobehavioral symptoms for this group.

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来源期刊
NeuroRehabilitation
NeuroRehabilitation CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
178
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: NeuroRehabilitation, an international, interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal, publishes manuscripts focused on scientifically based, practical information relevant to all aspects of neurologic rehabilitation. We publish unsolicited papers detailing original work/research that covers the full life span and range of neurological disabilities including stroke, spinal cord injury, traumatic brain injury, neuromuscular disease and other neurological disorders. We also publish thematically organized issues that focus on specific clinical disorders, types of therapy and age groups. Proposals for thematic issues and suggestions for issue editors are welcomed.
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