AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to investigate if socioeconomic status (SES) is a better predictor of cognitive outcomes in children after an arterial ischemic stroke than clinical factors like initial lesion volume.* -
  • Researchers assessed cognitive abilities in 18 children and adolescents, finding that SES significantly influenced perceptual reasoning, executive functions, language, and memory, explaining up to 42% of variance in these areas.* -
  • The results suggest that future studies should consider SES in their analyses and emphasize the need for targeted treatment for children from low SES backgrounds, as it has a stronger impact on cognitive recovery than clinical factors.*

Article Abstract

Aim: To determine whether socioeconomic status (SES) is a stronger predictor for cognitive outcome after childhood arterial ischemic stroke compared to clinical factors.

Method: We investigated perceptual reasoning, executive functions, language, memory, and attention in 18 children and adolescents (12 males, six females, median age at testing 13y 4mo, range 7y-17y 5mo) after arterial ischemic stroke; collected sociodemographic information (education of parents, household income); and used clinical information (initial lesion volume, residual lesion volume, age at stroke, time since stroke). Linear regression models were used to investigate the potential influence of SES and clinical parameters on cognitive abilities.

Results: SES had a moderate effect on all cognitive outcome parameters except attention by explaining 41.9%, 37.9%, 38.0%, and 22.5% of variability in perceptual reasoning, executive functions, language, and memory respectively. Initial lesion volume was the only clinical parameter that showed moderate importance on cognitive outcome (33.1% and 25.6% of the variability in perceptual reasoning and memory respectively). Overall, SES was a stronger predictor of cognitive outcome than clinical factors.

Interpretation: Future paediatric studies aiming at clinical predictors of cognitive outcome should control their analyses for SES in their study participants. The findings of the present study further point to the need for more attention to the treatment of children with low SES.

What This Paper Adds: Socioeconomic status (SES) explains up to 42% of variance in cognitive outcome after childhood arterial ischemic stroke. SES is a stronger predictor of outcome than clinical factors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7986130PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.14779DOI Listing

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