TY - JOUR
T1 - Mismatch Negativity Recording in Children with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
T2 - A Preliminary Study Integrating Neurophysiological and Neuropsychological Results
AU - Filippini, Melissa
AU - Guerra, Angelo
AU - Negosanti, Alessandra
AU - Santi, Sara
AU - Sarajlija, Jasenka
AU - Musti, Muriel Assunta
AU - Gobbi, Giuseppe
AU - Lassonde, Maryse
AU - Pini, Antonella
PY - 2016/11/1
Y1 - 2016/11/1
N2 - Many studies on Duchenne muscular dystrophy children support the hypothesis of a specific neuropsychological phenotype affecting mostly phonological skills. This prospective study aimed to shed light on the role of phonological abilities. Fourteen Duchenne muscular dystrophy children and 7 healthy children underwent mismatch negativity. Moreover, verbal intelligence, visuospatial attention, immediate verbal memory, working memory, grammar, vocabulary, visuomotor skills, reading, text comprehension, writing, and arithmetic were tested in Duchenne muscular dystrophy children. No significant difference between control and Duchenne muscular dystrophy children was found neither for mismatch negativity amplitude (P =.191 and.116, respectively) nor for latency (P =.135). Eight (57.14%) patients showed an impairment of immediate verbal memory and of visuomotor skills, 7 (63.64%) patients had a deficit in writing and arithmetic skills, even with a mean normal intelligence quotient. Taken together, the results put in evidence a heterogeneous neuropsychological profile not explainable on the basis of a phonological deficit.
AB - Many studies on Duchenne muscular dystrophy children support the hypothesis of a specific neuropsychological phenotype affecting mostly phonological skills. This prospective study aimed to shed light on the role of phonological abilities. Fourteen Duchenne muscular dystrophy children and 7 healthy children underwent mismatch negativity. Moreover, verbal intelligence, visuospatial attention, immediate verbal memory, working memory, grammar, vocabulary, visuomotor skills, reading, text comprehension, writing, and arithmetic were tested in Duchenne muscular dystrophy children. No significant difference between control and Duchenne muscular dystrophy children was found neither for mismatch negativity amplitude (P =.191 and.116, respectively) nor for latency (P =.135). Eight (57.14%) patients showed an impairment of immediate verbal memory and of visuomotor skills, 7 (63.64%) patients had a deficit in writing and arithmetic skills, even with a mean normal intelligence quotient. Taken together, the results put in evidence a heterogeneous neuropsychological profile not explainable on the basis of a phonological deficit.
KW - cerebellar hypothesis
KW - Duchenne muscular dystrophy
KW - mismatch negativity
KW - neuropsychological profile
KW - phonological hypothesis
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U2 - 10.1177/0883073816656404
DO - 10.1177/0883073816656404
M3 - Article
C2 - 27422795
AN - SCOPUS:84991230468
SN - 0883-0738
VL - 31
SP - 1468
EP - 1474
JO - Journal of Child Neurology
JF - Journal of Child Neurology
IS - 13
ER -