Small for Gestational Age Moderate to Late Preterm Children: A Neuropsychological Follow-up

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Abstract

Determine whether SGA constitutes a neurodevelopmental risk-factor of MLP, exploring if potential developmental difficulties at toddlerhood persist and are related to school-age performance. 109 SGA and 109 adequate for gestational age MLP children were evaluated at 2 and at 6.5 y.o. SGA children obtained poorer results in several areas at both timepoints; and their development at toddlerhood strongly correlated with only some results at school-age. SGA confers vulnerability to MLP, evolving from global/unspecific difficulties in toddlerhood to a domain-specific profile (attentional/dysexecutive) at 6.5. Findings claim the need for neuropsychological follow-up in MLP to identify emerging difficulties.

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APA

Labayru, G., Aliri, J., Santos, A., Arrizabalaga, A., Estevez, M., Cancela, V., … Sistiaga, A. (2021). Small for Gestational Age Moderate to Late Preterm Children: A Neuropsychological Follow-up. Developmental Neuropsychology, 46(4), 277–287. https://doi.org/10.1080/87565641.2021.1939349

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