Visual sensory and perceptive functioning in 5-year-old very preterm/very-low-birthweight children.

Journal: Developmental Medicine And Child Neurology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To examine visual sensory and perceptive functions, study their interrelations, and explore associations between visual dysfunctions and intelligence in very preterm/very-low-birthweight (VP/VLBW) children.

Methods: One-hundred and sixteen VP/VLBW children (57 males, 59 females; mean gestational age 30.1 wks, SD 2.3; mean corrected age 5 y 6 mo, SD 1 mo) and 73 term-born children (40 males, 33 females; mean gestational age 39.9 wks, SD 1.3; mean age 5 y 6 mo, SD 3 mo) completed visual sensory (acuity, visual field, contrast-, color-, and stereovision), perceptive (visual coherence, and Developmental Test of Visual Perception non-motor scale), and intelligence assessments.

Results: Compared with term-born children, VP/VLBW children had reduced acuity (d=0.70, p<0.001), inferior visual field (d=0.67, p<0.001), and stereovision (v=0.19, p=0.008). VP/VBLW children showed weaker static coherence (d=0.49, p=0.001) and Position in Space (d=0.41, p=0.006) performance, independent of visual sensory deficits, and showed lower Verbal IQ (VIQ) and Performance IQ (PIQ; p<0.001). Visual perceptive functioning accounted for 13% of variance in VIQ, and for 35% of variance in PIQ.

Conclusions: Visual sensory and perceptive dysfunctions are present in VP/VLBW children and occur largely independently of each other. Visual perceptive dysfunctions are moderately associated with PIQ, and weakly with VIQ.

Authors
Christiaan Geldof, Jaap Oosterlaan, Pieter Vuijk, Meindert De Vries, Joke Kok, Aleid Van Wassenaer Leemhuis