| Literature DB >> 26784561 |
Matthew T Rätsep1, Andrew F Hickman2, Brandon Maser2, Jessica Pudwell3, Graeme N Smith4, Donald Brien5, Patrick W Stroman5, Michael A Adams2, James N Reynolds6, B Anne Croy2, Angelina Paolozza5.
Abstract
Preeclampsia (PE) is a significant clinical disorder occurring in 3-5% of all human pregnancies. Offspring of PE pregnancies (PE-F1s) are reported to exhibit greater cognitive impairment than offspring from uncomplicated pregnancies. Previous studies of PE-F1 cognitive ability used tests with bias that do not assess specific cognitive domains. To improve cognitive impairment classification in PE-F1s we used standardized clinical psychometric testing and eye tracking studies of saccadic eye movements. PE-F1s (n=10) and sex/age matched control participants (n=41 for psychometrics; n=59 for eye-tracking) were recruited from the PE-NET study or extracted from the NeuroDevNet study databases. Participants completed a selected array of psychometric tests which assessed executive function, working memory, attention, inhibition, visuospatial processing, reading, and math skills. Eye-tracking studies included the prosaccade, antisaccade, and memory-guided tasks. Psychometric testing revealed an impairment in working memory among PE-F1s. Eye-tracking studies revealed numerous impairments among PE-F1s including additional saccades required to reach the target, poor endpoint accuracy, and slower reaction time. However, PE-F1s made faster saccades than controls, and fewer sequence errors in the memory-guided task. Our study provides a comprehensive assessment of cognitive function among PE-F1s. The development of PE may be seen as an early predictor of reduced cognitive function in children, specifically in working memory and oculomotor control. Future studies should extended to a larger study populations, and may be valuable for early studies of children born to pregnancies complicated by other disorders, such as gestational diabetes or intrauterine growth restriction.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Developmental origins of disease; Eye-tracking; Preeclampsia; Psychometrics; Working memory
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26784561 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2016.01.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Brain Res ISSN: 0166-4328 Impact factor: 3.332