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WISC-V motor-free cognitive profile and predictive factors in adolescents with cerebral palsy

journal contribution
posted on 2022-05-19, 06:58 authored by M Coceski, Darren HockingDarren Hocking, Hisham Abu-RayyaHisham Abu-Rayya, S Sherwell, SM Reid, DS Reddihough, J Wrennall, Robyn StargattRobyn Stargatt
Background: The most commonly used intelligence tests – the Wechsler Scales – do not provide standardised procedures for assessing children with motor impairment, and as a result, may underestimate the intelligence quotient (IQ) of young people with CP. Aims: To characterise a motor-free cognitive profile of adolescents with CP using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children – Fifth edition (WISC-V) and explore the influence of clinical factors on cognitive abilities. Methods and procedure: The WISC-V was used to assess cognitive abilities in 70 adolescents (M = 14 years 6 months, SD = 10 months). Sixty-six adolescents (Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) Level I, n = 26; II, n = 23; III, n = 15; IV, n = 1; V, n = 1) obtained either a Motor-free IQ or index score using the motor-free method. Outcomes and results: MFIQ and index scores fell below the normative data and rates of borderline and impaired cognitive abilities were significantly higher in the CP group. Scores showed an uneven cognitive profile with a relative strength in verbal abilities. Severity of motor impairment and small for gestational age (SGA) were associated with lower IQ scores. A history of seizures was related to lower verbal abilities. Conclusions and implications: Cognitive abilities of adolescents with CP are significantly below expectation compared to normative data. Severity of motor impairment, SGA, and seizures need to be recognised by health professionals as risk factors for cognitive impairment. A substantial proportion of adolescents showed borderline cognitive abilities, constituting a group with CP which are relatively neglected in the literature.

Funding

A special thank you to the children and parents who took part in this study. Funding for the Victorian Cerebral Palsy Register was gratefully received from The Lorenzo and Pamela Galli Medical Research Trust, the Victorian Department Health and Human Services, and the Royal Children's Hospital Foundation. Infrastructure support was provided by the Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program.

History

Publication Date

2021-06-01

Journal

Research in Developmental Disabilities

Volume

113

Article Number

ARTN 103934

Pagination

11p.

Publisher

Elsevier BV

ISSN

0891-4222

Rights Statement

2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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