1.Executive Dysfunction and It's Relation to K-WAIS Scores in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Patients with Normal Intelligence Quotient.
Dae Bo LEE ; In Seon YOON ; Seon Kyung KIM ; Seung Ho RHO ; Min Cheol PARK ; Sang Yeol LEE
Korean Journal of Psychosomatic Medicine 2012;20(1):50-58
OBJECTIVES: This study examined the selective deficits of executive function in patients with mild traumatic brain injury that in normal range of general intelligence level and aimed to analysis of the correlation between K-WAIS result and executive function. METHODS: 59 subjects were included in this study, who were diagnosed as mild traumatic brain injury(MTBI) and they have visited in neuropsychiatric department of Wonkwang University Hospital during from March, 2005 to September, 2010. For measurement of general intelligence quotient, the Korean-Wechsler Adults Intelligence Scale(K-WAIS) was administered and for measurement of executive intelligence quotient(EIQ), Executive Intelligence Test(EXIT) was administered. RESULTS: Of patients, 50.8% included at abnormal EIQ group. The patients of abnormal EIQ showed poorer full scale IQ(FIQ), performance IQ(PIQ) and in subscale that picture arrangement, digit symbol, digit span, block design, object assembly and comprehension were significantly different. In terms of relationships between K-WAIS and EIQ, FIQ and PIQ have positive correlation with EIQ. And in subscale, picture arrangement, digit symbol, digit span, block design, object assembly and comprehension show positive correlation with EIQ. CONCLUSION: This study suggest that MTBI patients with have normal range of general intelligence level may have deficit of executive function is common. The decline of FIQ, PIQ and some subscales of K-WAIS may suggest executive dysfunction in MTBI patients.
Adult
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Brain
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Brain Injuries
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Comprehension
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Executive Function
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Humans
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Intelligence
;
Reference Values
;
Wechsler Scales
2.Cognitive impairment in children with benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: a prospective study.
Hai-Bo FANG ; Rong WANG ; Lin-Na CHU ; Yan-Fang FENG ; Rong-Rong BAI ; Feng-Tong GUO
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2021;23(8):791-796
OBJECTIVES:
To study the difference in cognitive impairment between the children with benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (BECT) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and those with BECT or ADHD alone.
METHODS:
A prospective study was performed on 80 children with BECT and ADHD, 91 children with BECT, and 70 children with ADHD , who were diagnosed with the diseases for the first time. Seventy children of the same age who underwent physical examination were enrolled as the healthy control group. Event-related potential P300, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, and integrated visual and auditory continuous performance test were used to measure and compare each index between groups.
RESULTS:
Compared with the healthy control group, the BECT+ADHD group, the BECT group, and the ADHD group had a significantly prolonged P300 latency, a significant reduction in the amplitude of P300, and significant reductions in the scores of verbal comprehension index (VCI), perceptual reasoning index (PRI), working memory index (WMI), processing speed index (PSI), full scale intelligence quotient (FSIQ), auditory response control quotient (ARCQ), visual response control quotient, full response control quotient (FRCQ), auditory attention quotient (AAQ), visual attention quotient, and full attention quotient (
CONCLUSIONS
Compared with the children with BECT or ADHD alone, the children with both BECT and ADHD have basically the same fields of cognitive impairment but a higher degree of cognitive impairment in some fields.
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
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Child
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Cognitive Dysfunction/etiology*
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Epilepsy
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Humans
;
Prospective Studies
;
Wechsler Scales
3.Intellectual characteristics of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and developmental dyslexia.
Zhen-Zhu YU ; Bin-Rang YANG ; Shan-Hong ZHANG ; Peng WANG
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2021;23(2):148-152
OBJECTIVE:
To study the intellectual characteristics of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and developmental dyslexia (DD).
METHODS:
A total of 55 children with ADHD and DD (ADHD+DD group), 150 children with ADHD alone (ADHD group), and 22 children with DD alone (DD group) were enrolled as subjects. Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Fourth Edition (WISC-IV) was used to evaluate and compare intellectual characteristics among the three groups.
RESULTS:
There were significant differences in the scores of full-scale intelligence quotient (FSIQ), verbal comprehension index, perceptual reasoning index, and working memory index among the three groups (
CONCLUSIONS
Compared with the children with ADHD alone, the children with ADHD and DD have more severe impairment of FSIQ, verbal comprehension, perceptual reasoning, and working memory, and therefore, it is suggested to enhance the training on similarities, vocabulary, matrix reasoning, picture concepts, and recitation for children with ADHD and DD in clinical practice.
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
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Child
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Dyslexia
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Humans
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Intelligence Tests
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Memory, Short-Term
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Wechsler Scales
4.Eye Movement Characteristics of Cooperation Degree during Image Completion Test in Psychiatric Impairment Assessment.
Jun Jie WANG ; Chao LIU ; Lu LIU ; Sheng Yu ZHANG ; Hao Zhe LI ; Wei Xiong CAI
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2017;33(2):154-157
OBJECTIVES:
To explore the difference of eye movement characteristics between uncooperative and cooperative subjects with mental disorder after cerebral trauma.
METHODS:
Thirty-nine subjects which needed psychiatric impairment assessment were selected. According to the binomial forced-choice digit memory test (BFDMT), all subjects were divided into cooperative and uncooperative groups. The subjects were asked to take the image completion test from Wechsler adult intelligence scale. Meanwhile, the data of eye movement track, fixation, saccade, pupil and blink were recorded by the track system of eye movement.
RESULTS:
There were significantly differences (P<0.05) in the data of saccade between cooperative (10 cases) and uncooperative groups (29 cases). The frequency, time, amplitude, acceleration of saccadic in uncooperative group were significantly higher than cooperation group. The saccade latencies of cooperation group increased more than uncooperative group. There was a significant difference (P<0.05) in total discrete distance, average distance and total time of fixation between two groups, while the average duration time, number and frequency of fixation had no significantly difference (P>0.05) between two groups. And the blink frequency of cooperation group was higher than uncooperative group.
CONCLUSIONS
Eye movement can be an objective index for the primary judgment of cooperation level.
Adult
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Eye Movement Measurements
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Eye Movements/physiology*
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Humans
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Intelligence Tests
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Saccades/physiology*
;
Wechsler Scales
5.The intelligence characteristics of the head traumatic children.
Kuan-Lin LIU ; Bin KONG ; Tian-You GUO
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2006;22(2):137-138
OBJECTIVE:
To explore characteristics of the head traumatic children's intelligence.
METHODS:
The authors investigated 43 head trauma children and 50 normal children, using Wechser Intelligence Test (C-WISC). Data were analyzed by SPSS10.0 on computer.
RESULTS
Head trauma children had lower FIQ, VJQ, PIQ than normal children. Pervaded head trauma has more contribution to the damage of the children's intelligence.
Accidents, Traffic
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Adolescent
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Child
;
Child Development
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Craniocerebral Trauma/psychology*
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Female
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Humans
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Intelligence
;
Intelligence Tests
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Language
;
Male
;
Wechsler Scales
6.Correlations between event-related potentials with pictures recognition and WMS-RC scores in patients with memory disorder caused by severe traumatic brain injury.
Zilong, LIU ; Liang, LIU ; Zebing, FAN ; Xiaorui, CHEN ; Xiaohong, ZHAO ; Lingli, ZHANG ; Guangxun, RAO ; Haixia, LI
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2008;28(6):700-5
This study explored the possibility of using event-related potentials (ERP) for the measurement of picture-recognition memory and examined its correlation with the Chinese Wechsler Memory Scale-revised (WMS-RC) in patients with memory disorder caused by severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI). The subjects included 20 sTBI patients with memory disorder and 22 healthy individuals. Memory function was measured by using WMS-RC. Behavioral and ERP responses were recorded on-line during performance on a battery of picture recognition and the responses were analyzed off-line for recognition memory effects. Mean memory quotient (MQ) of patients with sTBI was significantly lower than that of the control group. Mean reaction time (RT) was significantly longer and the mean correctness rate (CR) of picture recognition was significantly lower in sTBI group than that of the controls. In controls, the main components of average ERP of picture recognition includes two positive-going waves, designated as P(170) and P(500), that appear 170 ms and 500 ms after stimulation when the subject could later successfully recall and recognize the pictures. P(500) amplitude of target stimulus was significantly higher than that of non-target stimulus. Compared to controls, P(500) responses of sTBI group were significantly delayed in latency (P<0.001) and lower in amplitude (P<0.001). P(500) latency showed significant negative correlation with MQ and the scores of "addition", "visual recognition", "picture recall", "visual reproduction" and "tactile memory" in WMS-RC. ERP of picture recognition provides a neurophysiological approach to directly assess memory impairment, and P(500) may serve as a helpful index for memory disorder caused by sTBI in forensic practice.
Brain Injuries/*complications
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Case-Control Studies
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Evoked Potentials/*physiology
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Memory Disorders/*etiology
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Memory Disorders/*physiopathology
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Pattern Recognition, Physiological/*physiology
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Wechsler Scales
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Young Adult
7.Relationship between the data from MR-diffusion tensor imaging and the clinical cognitive evaluation in Alzheimer's disease.
Ye SUN ; Xiang-ke DU ; Zhen-xin ZHANG ; Xia CHEN
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2004;26(2):134-138
OBJECTIVETo determine the relationship between the extent of the damage and clinical data in Alzheimer's disease (AD).
METHODSTwenty-two patients with AD and twenty-two controls received MR-diffusion tensor scanning. The fractional anisotropy (FA) values of white matter in AD patients were measured respectively in parietal lobe and the genu of corpus callosum. Independent-samples t-test for non-paired data was used to test differences between AD and controls for FA values. Correlation analysis was applied to reveal the correlations between FA values in each region and the MMSE, FOM, RVR, BD and DS scores.
RESULTSPositive correlations were found between FA values in left parietal lobe and FOM/DS, and between FA values in genu of corpus callosum and MMSE scores.
CONCLUSIONSIn AD, the MR-DTI can reflect the relationship between the degree of white matter abnormalities and the cognitive impairment.
Aged ; Alzheimer Disease ; diagnosis ; pathology ; psychology ; Anisotropy ; Cerebral Cortex ; pathology ; Cognition ; Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Wechsler Scales
8.Event-related potentials P₃₀₀ with memory function and psychopathology in first-episode paranoid schizophrenia.
Wei-bo LIU ; Qiao-zhen CHEN ; Hou-min YIN ; Lei-lei ZHENG ; Shao-hua YU ; Yi-ping CHEN ; Hui-chun LI
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2011;40(6):647-652
OBJECTIVETo investigate the variability of event-related potentials P(300) and the relationship with memory function/psychopathology in patients with first-episode paranoid schizophrenia.
METHODSThirty patients with first-episode paranoid schizophrenia (patient group) and twenty health subjects (control group) were enrolled in the study. The auditory event-related potentials P₃₀₀ at the scalp electrodes Cz, Pz and Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS) were examined in both groups, Positive And Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) was evaluated in patient group.
RESULTSIn comparison with control group, patients had longer latency of P₃₀₀ [(390.6 ± 47.6)ms at Cz and (393.3 ± 50.1)ms at Pz] (P<0.01), lower amplitude of P₃₀₀ [(7.7 ± 3.4) μV at Cz and (8.5 ± 3.9)μV at Pz] (P<0.05-0.01). The memory quotient (88.1 ± 10.0) scores and short-term memory, immediate memory in patient group were damaged significantly (P<0.05-0.01). In patient group, the latency of P300 was correlated positively with PANSS scores and negatively with WMS scores (P<0.05-0.01).
CONCLUSIONFirst-episode paranoid schizophrenia has memory deficit, which can be evaluated comprehensively by P₃₀₀ and WMS. The longer latency of P₃₀₀ might be associated with the increased severity of first-episode paranoid schizophrenia.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Event-Related Potentials, P300 ; physiology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Memory ; physiology ; Neuropsychological Tests ; Schizophrenia, Paranoid ; physiopathology ; Wechsler Scales ; Young Adult
9.A twin study on intelligence and processing speed heritability of children and adolescent.
Xiao-wei ZHANG ; Yi HUANG ; Yun XIANG ; Xin GAO ; Ming-jing SITU ; Hui FANG ; Yi ZHANG ; Yi-xiao FU ; Lu JIA ; Hua-qing MENG ; Xiao-hong MA ; Ying-cheng WANG ; Xie-he LIU ; Tao LI
Chinese Journal of Medical Genetics 2009;26(3):326-330
OBJECTIVETo explore the effects of the genetic and environmental factors on intelligence of children and adolescent from the Southwest China Prospective Twin Registry (SCPT).
METHODSThe intelligence was investigated by using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (C-WISC) in 333 twin pairs aged 6-16 years. The effects of genetic and environmental factors on IQ were analyzed by using structural equation modeling (SEM) and correlation analysis method. The effects in different sex and age groups in this population were also investigated.
RESULTSGenetic influence accounted for 0.43 of total IQ variance and 0.37 of verbal IQ in 6-16 years old children and adolescent, but there was no significant genetic effect on performance IQ. The heritability of children aged 10-16 years was higher than that of those aged 6-10 years (total IQ: 0.82 vs 0.00, verbal IQ: 0.80 vs 0.00, performance IQ:0.51 vs 0.00). In males the heritability of verbal IQ (0.47) was higher than that in females (0.05). The shared environmental influences accounted fo r the majority of variance of performance IQ in both males and females.
CONCLUSIONThere is moderate heritability on the total IQ and verbal IQ, while shared environmental factors played important roles on the variance of performance IQ. The heritability of IQ, verbal IQ and performance IQ are higher in older children and adolescent than that in younger children.
Adolescent ; Age Factors ; Child ; Child Development ; physiology ; Environment ; Female ; Humans ; Intelligence ; genetics ; Male ; Psychomotor Performance ; physiology ; Reaction Time ; genetics ; Sex Characteristics ; Sex Factors ; Twins ; genetics ; Wechsler Scales
10.A debate about mental disability expertise of the disability evaluation criteria of traffic accident injurious.
Wei HAN ; Shan-Zhi GU ; Teng CHEN ; Xiao-Di JIA
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2006;22(2):144-146
In recent years, mental disability estimation are more than ever in the practice of forensic psychiatric expertise. The standards about mental disability estimation in the Disability Evaluation Criteria of Traffic Accident Injury are ambiguous and difficult to operate, it cause to different understanding in one case. This article discuss some common questions through 3 aspects in mental disability expertise according to some typical cases, there are the first, we should compare the IQ score before and after injurious in intelligence estimate. The second, the mental disability estimation should be done at least one year after the end of medicine treatment. The third, mental estimate scale should be used in mental disability estimation.
Accidents, Traffic
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Adolescent
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Craniocerebral Trauma/psychology*
;
Disability Evaluation
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Expert Testimony/standards*
;
Female
;
Forensic Psychiatry/legislation & jurisprudence*
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Humans
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Intelligence
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Male
;
Persons with Mental Disabilities
;
Wechsler Scales
;
Young Adult