Differences between children with Down syndrome and typically developing children in adaptive behaviour, executive functions and visual acuity

Author:

de Weger Christine,Boonstra F. Nienke,Goossens Jeroen

Abstract

AbstractIn children with Down syndrome (DS) development of visual, motor and cognitive functions is atypical. It is unknown whether the visual impairments in children with DS aggravate their lag in cognitive development. Visual impairment and developmental lags in adaptive behaviour and executive functions were assessed in 104 children with DS, 2–16 years, by comparing their adaptive behaviour, executive functions and visual acuity (distant and near) scores against published age-matched norm scores of typically developing children. Associations between these lags were explored. Mean (± SEM) differences to age-matched norms indicated reduced performance in DS: Vineland Screener questionnaire, − 63 ± 3.8 months; task-based Minnesota Executive Function Scale (MEFS), − 46.09 ± 2.07 points; BRIEF-P questionnaire, 25.29 ± 4.66 points; BRIEF parents’ and teachers’ questionnaire, 17.89 ± 3.92 points and 40.10 ± 3.81 points; distant and near visual acuity, 0.51 ± 0.03 LogMAR and 0.63 ± 0.03 LogMAR (near − 0.11 ± 0.04 LogMAR poorer than distant). Adaptive behaviour (Vineland-S) correlated with the severity of visual impairment (r = − 0.396). Children with DS are severely impaired in adaptive behaviour, executive functions and visual acuities (near visual acuity more severely impaired than distant visual acuity). Larger impairment in adaptive behaviour is found in children with larger visual impairment. This supports the idea that visual acuity plays a role in adaptive development.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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1. Personal and environmental factors and household assistance in Down syndrome: cross-sectional study;Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências;2024

2. An Exploration of Challenging Behavior Associated with Down Syndrome;Journal of Mental Health Research in Intellectual Disabilities;2023-11-22

3. Ophthalmologic and neuro‐ophthalmologic findings in children with Down syndrome;American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C: Seminars in Medical Genetics;2023-10-04

4. Cognitive flexibility assessment in youth with Down syndrome: Reliability, practice effects, and validity;Research in Developmental Disabilities;2023-02

5. Confirmatory factor analysis of the BRIEF2 in a sample of youth with Down syndrome;Journal of Intellectual Disability Research;2022-12-26

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