Literature DB >> 15880080

Cognitive abilities in children after liver transplantation.

Tanja Kaller1, Karl-Heinz Schulz, Katrin Sander, Anneli Boeck, Xavier Rogiers, Martin Burdelski.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The authors investigated the cognitive status during the late postoperative phase in children who had undergone liver transplantation (LTx).
METHODS: The authors examined 44 children who had undergone liver transplantation at their center. The children were 8.9+/-2.3 (mean+/-SD) years of age and had received the transplant 6.1+/-2.6 years previously. In 24 of the 44 children, a living-related transplantation had been carried out. Cognitive abilities were assessed with the three subscales of the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children (K-ABC): the sequential processing scale (SES), the simultaneous processing scale (SIS), and the achievement scale (AS).
RESULTS: The children scored below the population mean but within the normal range on all subscales of the K-ABC. In the SIS and the AS, age at transplantation influenced the cognitive outcome, as the children who were younger at transplantation scored significantly better than the older children and their results were within the normal range. However, for the SES, no such differences were found. A multiple regression analysis revealed that duration of illness and height at transplantation predicts the performance in the SIS and the AS. To a lesser degree, type of transplantation (cadaveric vs. living-related) predicts performance in the AS. Performance in the SES was not predicted by any of these variables. Time since LTx and type of immunosuppressive regimen were not associated with the cognitive status after transplantation.
CONCLUSIONS: Children who are younger, with a shorter duration of illness, and who are more physically developed before LTx have a better prognosis regarding their mental development. However, this result does not hold for sequential processing functions, which showed no relationship with any of these variables. This could indicate differential effects of liver disease and consecutive metabolic derangements on brain development during the preoperative phase.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15880080     DOI: 10.1097/01.tp.0000161251.20520.42

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transplantation        ISSN: 0041-1337            Impact factor:   4.939


  11 in total

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2.  Recommendations for the assessment and reporting of multivariable logistic regression in transplantation literature.

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3.  PedsQL™ Cognitive Functioning Scale in pediatric liver transplant recipients: feasibility, reliability, and validity.

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4.  Cross-sectional analysis of health-related quality of life in pediatric liver transplant recipients.

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Review 8.  Beyond five years: long-term follow-up in pediatric liver transplantation.

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10.  Assessment of School Readiness in Chronic Cholestatic Liver Disease: A Pilot Study Examining Children with and without Liver Transplantation.

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