Neurocognitive Risk in Children With Cochlear Implants

dc.contributor.authorKronenberger, William G.
dc.contributor.authorBeer, Jessica
dc.contributor.authorCastellanos, Irina
dc.contributor.authorPisoni, David B.
dc.contributor.authorMiyamoto, Richard T.
dc.contributor.departmentPsychiatry, School of Medicineen_US
dc.date.accessioned2018-04-03T20:26:06Z
dc.date.available2018-04-03T20:26:06Z
dc.date.issued2014-07
dc.description.abstractIMPORTANCE Children who receive a cochlear implant (CI) for early severe to profound sensorineural hearing loss may achieve age-appropriate spoken language skills not possible before implantation. Despite these advances, reduced access to auditory experience may have downstream effects on fundamental neurocognitive processes for some children with CIs. OBJECTIVE To determine the relative risk (RR) of clinically significant executive functioning deficits in children with CIs compared with children with normal hearing (NH). DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS In this prospective, cross-sectional study, 73 children at a hospital-based clinic who received their CIs before 7 years of age and 78 children with NH, with average to above average mean nonverbal IQ scores, were recruited in 2 age groups: preschool age (age range, 3–5 years) and school age (age range, 7–17 years). No children presented with other developmental, cognitive, or neurologic diagnoses. INTERVENTIONS Parent-reported checklist measures of executive functioning were completed during psychological testing sessions. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Estimates of the RR of clinically significant deficits in executive functioning (≥ 1 SDs above the mean) for children with CIs compared with children with NH were obtained based on 2 parent-reported child behavior checklists of everyday problems with executive functioning. RESULTS In most domains of executive functioning, children with CIs were at 2 to 5 times greater risk of clinically significant deficits compared with children with NH. The RRs for preschoolers and school-aged children, respectively, were greatest in the areas of comprehension and conceptual learning (RR [95% CI], 3.56 [1.71–7.43] and 6.25 [2.64–14.77]), factual memory ( 4.88 [1.58–15.07] and 5.47 [2.03–14.77]), attention (3.38 [1.03–11.04] and 3.13 [1.56–6.26]), sequential processing (11.25 [1.55–81.54] and 2.44 [1.24–4.76]), working memory (4.13 [1.30–13.06] and 3.64 [1.61–8.25] for one checklist and 1.77 [0.82–3.83] and 2.78 [1.18–6.51] for another checklist), and novel problem-solving (3.93 [1.50–10.34] and 3.13 [1.46–6.67]). No difference between the CI and NH samples was found for visual-spatial organization (2.63 [0.76–9.03] and 1.04 [0.45–2.40] on one checklist and 2.86 [0.98–8.39] for school-aged children on the other checklist). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE A large proportion of children with CIs are at risk for clinically significant deficits across multiple domains of executive functioning, a rate averaging 2 to 5 times that of children with NH for most domains. Screening for risk of executive functioning deficits should be a routine part of the clinical evaluation of all children with deafness and CIs.en_US
dc.eprint.versionAuthor's manuscripten_US
dc.identifier.citationKronenberger, W. G., Beer, J., Castellanos, I., Pisoni, D. B., & Miyamoto, R. T. (2014). Neurocognitive Risk in Children With Cochlear Implants. JAMA Otolaryngology-- Head & Neck Surgery, 140(7), 608–615. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaoto.2014.757en_US
dc.identifier.issn2168-6181en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1805/15758
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.publisherAmerican Medical Associationen_US
dc.relation.isversionof10.1001/jamaoto.2014.757en_US
dc.relation.journalJAMA otolaryngology-- head & neck surgeryen_US
dc.rightsPublisher Policyen_US
dc.sourcePMCen_US
dc.subjectcochlear implanten_US
dc.subjectneurocognitive processen_US
dc.subjectchildrenen_US
dc.titleNeurocognitive Risk in Children With Cochlear Implantsen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
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