| Literature DB >> 29434433 |
Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory demyelinating and neurodegenerative disease. Although cognitive impairment has been well established in adult patients with MS, its occurrence in patients with pediatric-onset MS has recently been reported. In this review, I discuss the main features of cognitive impairment in pediatric MS as determined by long-term follow-up studies, neuropsychiatric test batteries, and the results of neuroradiological imaging studies that investigated the pathogenesis of pediatric MS. The most commonly affected cognitive domains in adults are attention, processing speed, and visuomotor skills; language and intelligence are also affected in pediatric MS. A young age at disease onset is the strongest risk factor for these impairments, which may be due to the effect of inflammatory demyelination and neurodegeneration on the developing central nervous system and neural networks in children. Cognitive impairment has long-term effects on patients' academic life and the quality of their social life. Therefore, all patients with pediatric MS should be screened and monitored for cognitive impairment. This review also highlights the need for neuropsychological test batteries that assess different cognitive domains in children and adolescents with multiple sclerosis and for cognitive rehabilitation programs to improve the quality of their academic and social life.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29434433 PMCID: PMC5757108 DOI: 10.1155/2017/1463570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Neurol ISSN: 0953-4180 Impact factor: 3.342
Methods and results of cross-sectional studies.
| Authors | MS sample size | Control sample size | Cognitive impairment definition | Neuropsychological tests | Impaired cognitive domains | Impairment rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Banwell and Anderson [ | 10 | — | Each individual's performance on each measure was scored relative to age norms. | Full-Scale IQ, Verbal IQ, Performance IQ, Verbal Comprehension Index, Perceptual Organization Index, Freedom from Distractibility Index, Processing Speed Index, CELF, COWAT, CELF formulated sentences, TLC Ambiguous sentences, VMI, Rey-O Figure, Grooved Pegboard, Vigilance subtest, CMS, CAVLT, WJRTA, WRAT | Language, visuomotor integration, verbal and visual memory, information processing speed, working memory and executive functions, general cognition | |
|
| ||||||
| MacAllister et al. [ | 37 | — | Scores > 1.5 SDs below the published normative means on least 2 cognitive tasks | TMT, COWAT, Boston Naming Test, CELF-3rd edition, two subtests of the WRAML: Verbal Learning and Visual Learning, VMI | Complex attention receptive language, naming, memory | 35% |
|
| ||||||
| Amato et al. [ | 63 | 57 | Scoring less than the 5th percentile of healthy control performance on least 3 tests | WISC-R, SRT and SRT-D from the Rao's BRB, SPART and SPART-D from the BRB, SDMT from the BRB, TMT A and B, Modified Card Sorting Test, Semantic and Phonemic Verbal Fluency Test, and Oral Denomination Test from the Aachener Aphasia Test | Complex attention, visual and verbal memory, executive functions, language function | 31% |
|
| ||||||
| Till et al. [ | 35 | 33 | Three or more test scores 1.5 SDs below the normative values on the test battery | WASI, TMT-A and B, SDMT-Oral version, Visual Matching from the Woodcock–Johnson III (WJ-III) Test of Cognitive Abilities, Rapid Picture Naming from the WJ-III Test of Cognitive Abilities, Conner's Continuous Performance Test—5th edition, WSR, WMI-5th edition, Verbal Fluency subtest from the Delis–Kaplan Executive Function System, Picture Vocabulary from WJ-III Tests of Academic Achievement, Vocabulary and Similarities subtests from the WASI, WCST | Attention, information processing speed, expressive language, visuomotor integration | 29.4% |
|
| ||||||
| Julian et al. [ | 187 (MS) | — | ≥33% of test scores < 1 SD below normative data | WASI Full 2, Wechsler Individual Achievement Test II Pseudoword Decoding, Expressive One-Word Picture Vocabulary Test, Digit Span test, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children Coding Test, Contingency Naming Test, Delis Kaplan Executive Function System Trail Making Test, California Verbal Learning Test-Child version or II, WMI-6th edition, Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence Matrix Reasoning, Grooved Pegboard Test | Fine motor speed, visuomotor integration, information processing speed | 35% (MS) |
BRB: Rao's Brief Repeatable Battery; CAVLT: children's auditory verbal learning test; CELF: clinical evaluation of language fundamentals; CMS: children's memory scale; COWAT: controlled oral word association test; Rey-O: Rey–Osterreith complex figure; SDMT: Symbol Digit Modalities Test; SRT: Selective Reminding Test; SRT-D: Selective Reminding Test-Delayed; SPART: Spatial Recall Test; SPART-D: Spatial Recall Test-Delayed; TMT: Trail Making Test; TLC: test of language competence; VMI: Beery–Buktenica visual motor integration test; WASI: Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence; WCST: Wisconsin card sorting test; WISC-R: Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised; WJ: Woodcock Johnson; WJRTA: Woodcock Johnson-revised tests of achievement; WRAML: wide range assessment of memory and learning test; WRAT: wide range achievement test; WSR: word selective reminding.
Methods and results of longitudinal follow-up studies.
| Authors | MS sample size at follow-up | Healthy controls sample size at follow-up | Duration of follow-up | Neuropsychological tests | Rate of decline in MS sample | Impaired cognitive domains |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amato et al. [ | 56 | — | 2 years | SRT, SRT-D, SPART, SPART-D, SDMT, TMT-A, TMT-B, Tower of London Test, Semantic and Phonemic Verbal Fluency Test, Oral Denomination Test from the Aachener Aphasia Test | 70% (failure on at least 3 tests) | Verbal memory, complex attention, verbal fluency, receptive language |
|
| ||||||
| Amato et al. [ | 48 | — | 5 years | SRT, SRT-D, SPART, SPART-D, SDMT, TMT-A, TMT-B, Tower of London Test, Semantic and Phonemic Verbal Fluency Test, Oral Denomination Test from the Aachener Aphasia Test | 38% (failure on at least 3 tests) | Visual–spatial learning, expressive language |
|
| ||||||
| MacAllister et al. [ | 12 | — | 21.58 ± 9.3 months | TMT, COWAT, Boston Naming Test, CELF 3rd edition, WRAML, WMI | 5/12 (cognitive decline assessed using the criteria of more tests showing impaired at the time of the 2nd test than at the baseline) | Attention, executive functions, memory |
|
| ||||||
| Charvet et al. [ | 62 (MS) | — | 1.64 ± 0.63 years | WASI, WASI-II, CVLT-C, CVLT-II, EOWPVT, WIAT-II, VMI, Digit Span subtest from WISC-IV, WAIS-IV, TMT | Rate of impairment was 37% at baseline and 33% at follow-up | Visuomotor integration, information processing speed, attention |
|
| ||||||
| Hosseini et al. [ | 35 | — | Neuropsychological evaluations were conducted at baseline and up to four more assessments, with each evaluation separated by a minimum of 1 year. | SDMT, TMT, WASI, | This study examined changes in cognitive maturation in a cohort of pediatric-onset MS patients as a function of age at disease onset and cognitive reserve factors (baseline IQ and parental social status) | Younger age at disease-onset increases the vulnerability for disrupted performance on measures of information processing, visual scanning, perceptual/motor speed, and working memory |
|
| ||||||
| Till et al. [ | 28 | 26 | 13–16 months (mean: 15 months) | WASI, Visual Matching from the WJ Tests of Cognitive Abilities, TMT A-B, SDMT, Conner's Continuous Performance Test (5th edition)–number of omission errors, Vocabulary and Similarities subtests of the WASI, WJ Tests of Achievement, Verbal Fluency Test from DKEFS, VMI, Block Design and Matrix Reasoning subtests from the WASI, TOMAL-2, WSR, Grooved Pegboard test | Improving: 18% in MS group, 86% in control group | Attention, information processing speed, visuomotor integration, verbal fluency, visual memory, calculation, spelling ability |
CCI: cognitive change index; CVLT: California Verbal Learning Test; DKEFS: Delis–Kaplan executive function system; EOWPVT: Expressive One-Word Picture Vocabulary Test; RCI: reliable change index; TOMAL-2: test of memory and learning-2nd edition; WAIS-IV: Wechsler adult intelligence scale 4th edition; WIAT-II: Wechsler Individual Achievement Test-2nd edition.
Neuropsychological tests.
| Neuropsychological test | Cognitive domain |
|---|---|
| WISC-R (Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children) | IQ (intelligence quotient) |
|
| |
| SRT-LTS (Selective Reminding Test-Long-Term Storage) | Memory |
|
| |
| MCST (Modified Card Sorting Test) | Abstract/conceptual reasoning |
|
| |
| SDMT (Symbol Digit Modalities Test) | Attention/concentration |
|
| |
| SVFT (Semantic Verbal Fluency Test) | Language |
Brief Neuropsychological Battery for Children (BNBC).
| (i) SRT |
| (ii) SDMT |
| (iii) TMT |
| (iv) Vocabulary test from the WISC-R |
Duration: 30 minutes. Sensitivity (96%), specificity (76%).