Author:
BOONE KYLE BRAUER,SWERDLOFF RONALD S.,MILLER BRUCE L.,GESCHWIND DANIEL H.,RAZANI JILL,LEE ALISON,GONZALO IRENE GAW,HADDAL ANNA,RANKIN KATHERINE,LU PO,PAUL LYNN
Abstract
Children and adolescents with Klinefelter syndrome (XXY)
have been reported to show deficits in language processing
including VIQ < PIQ and a learning disability in reading
and spelling. However, whether this is characteristic of
adults with Klinefelter syndrome has not been established.
Thirty-five men with Klinefelter syndrome, aged 16 to 61, and
22 controls were evaluated with a comprehensive neuropsychological
battery. The Klinefelter patients scored significantly
below controls in language skills, verbal processing speed,
verbal and nonverbal executive abilities, and motor dexterity.
Within the Klinefelter sample, three cognitive subgroups
were identified: VIQ 7 or more points below PIQ (n
= 10), VIQ within 6 points of PIQ (n = 12), and
PIQ 7 or more points below VIQ (n = 12). The deficits
detected in language, verbal processing speed, and verbal
executive skills were found to be isolated to the VIQ <
PIQ subgroup, while the abnormalities in motor dexterity
and nonverbal executive skills were confined to the PIQ
< VIQ subgroup. Older age was significantly correlated
with increases in VIQ relative to PIQ in the patient group,
which suggests the intriguing possibility that the PIQ
< VIQ subgroup primarily emerges in young adulthood,
perhaps in response to the reported hormonal abnormalities
detected in Klinefelter syndrome patients during puberty.
(JINS, 2001, 7, 446–456)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Neurology,Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
108 articles.
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