南非某社区胎儿酒精综合征患儿字母和类别的流利性

Piyadasa W Kodituwakku, Colleen M Adnams, Andrea Hay, Ansie E Kitching, Elana Burger, Wendy O Kalberg, Denis L Viljoen, Philip A May
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引用次数: 61

摘要

目的:本研究探讨大量产前酒精暴露对儿童字母和类别流畅性是否存在差异影响。鉴于产前酒精暴露儿童的执行功能往往受损,字母流畅性比类别流畅性对执行过程的影响更大,预计胎儿酒精综合症(FAS)儿童的字母流畅性比类别流畅性受损更大。该研究的第二个目的是检查产前酒精暴露儿童两种流利程度的发展趋势。假设在6到9岁之间,这些FAS儿童在类别流利性方面表现出与年龄相关的变化,但在字母流利性方面没有变化。方法:作为为南非FAS国际合作研究设计的神经心理学测试的一部分,用南非荷兰语进行了字母和类别流畅性测试。参与者是62名FAS儿童和61名对照者,他们在年龄、性别(58名男孩和65名女孩)、种族和社会经济地位方面相匹配。结果:FAS组在字母流畅性方面比类别流畅性方面有更大的困难,在两种流畅性条件下,FAS组都产生了更少的单词。然而,与预期相反,受酒精影响的儿童在字母和类别流利性方面表现出与年龄相关的线性趋势。结论:这是第一次在非西方环境中对大量确诊为FAS的儿童进行语言流畅性研究。尽管如此,研究结果与西方国家对不同程度的产前酒精暴露儿童和不同程度的胎儿酒精谱系障碍的研究结果一致。这项研究表明,至少与产前酒精暴露相关的认知特征的某些方面可以跨越文化和种族界限。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Letter and category fluency in children with fetal alcohol syndrome from a community in South Africa.

Objective: This study investigated whether there were differential effects of substantial prenatal alcohol exposure on letter and category fluency in children. Given that children with prenatal alcohol exposure are often impaired in executive functioning and that letter fluency taxes executive processes more than category fluency, it was expected that children with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) would be more impaired in letter than in category fluency. A second objective of the study was to examine the developmental trends in the two types of fluency in children with prenatal alcohol exposure. It was hypothesized that between the ages of 6 and 9 years, these FAS children would show age-related changes in category fluency but not in letter fluency.

Method: As part of a neuropsychological test battery designed for an international collaborative study of FAS in South Africa, tests of letter and category fluency were administered in Afrikaans. The participants were 62 children with FAS and 61 controls matched with respect to age, gender (58 boys and 65 girls), ethnicity, and socioeconomic status.

Results: Results showed that the FAS group had relatively greater difficulty with letter fluency than with category fluency and that the FAS group generated fewer words in both fluency conditions. Contrary to the expectation, however, alcohol-affected children demonstrated age-related linear trends in both letter and category fluency.

Conclusions: This is the first study of verbal fluency involving a large sample of well-diagnosed children with FAS conducted in a nonwestern environment. The results are nonetheless consistent with those obtained in western countries in studies of children with various levels of prenatal alcohol exposure and various levels of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder. This study suggests that at least some aspects of the cognitive profile associated with prenatal alcohol exposure may be generalizable across cultural and ethnic boundaries.

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