The brain's structural connectivity and pre-reading abilities in young children with prenatal alcohol exposure.

Dev Cogn Neurosci

Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Canada; Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, University of Calgary, Canada; Departments of Radiology, University of Calgary, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Children exposed to alcohol before birth (PAE) may face neurological and behavioral challenges, particularly with reading and language skills.
  • Researchers studied brain scans and pre-reading abilities in 135 children aged 3-7, including 53 with PAE, using diffusion MRI and assessments like NEPSY-II.
  • Findings revealed that children with PAE scored lower on reading tests and showed different brain network properties compared to those not exposed, indicating brain changes linked to their reading difficulties.

Article Abstract

Children with prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) may develop a range of neurological and behavioral deficits, including reading and language disorders. Studying the brain's structural connectivity and its relationship to pre-reading/reading skills in young children with PAE can help understand the roots of reading deficits associated with PAE. 363 diffusion MRI scans from 135 children (114 scans from 53 children with PAE) were collected between ages 3-7 years. Children completed NEPSY-II Phonological Processing and Speeded Naming to assess pre-reading skills at each scan. Structural brain network properties were assessed in 16 regions from both hemispheres using graph theory. Linear mixed models were used to account for repeated measures within participants. Children with PAE had significantly lower pre-reading scores than unexposed children, and significantly lower graph theory metrics across bilateral reading networks. Moreover, PAE significantly moderated the associations between Phonological Processing and global efficiency and nodal degree in the bilateral and left hemisphere reading networks, such that children with PAE had stronger associations than unexposed controls. No significant associations were found for Speeded Naming. Our results suggest that brain alterations may underlie early pre-reading difficulties in children with PAE.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11564048PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2024.101467DOI Listing

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