Background: Oral language disorder and epilepsy in childhood. Aim: to verify the occurrence of oral language disorders in epileptic preschoolers attended at the Child Neurology Section of a university hospital. Method: a prospective study with 30 epileptic children who were submitted to an oral speech-language evaluation. Inclusion criteria: explicit diagnosis of epilepsy according to the ILAE (2005); ages between 3 to 6 years; normal neurological standard and neuropsychomotor development. Exclusion criteria: dubious diagnosis of epilepsy; altered neurological standard and neuropsychomotor development; children with associated pediatric disorders. Analyzed variables were: gender, age of first seizure, types of seizure and treatment regime. OR (odds ration) was determined, with a significance level of < 0.05. Results: 18 (60%) children with epilepsy presented oral language disorders and 12 (40%) presented normal language development. Regarding the observed disorders, 12 (67%) presented language disorder and 6 (33%) presented phonological disorder. Male children (OR = 2.03) and those with partial seizure (OR = 2.41) demonstrated to have a higher risk for oral language disorders. Conclusion: the results indicate that preschoolers with epilepsy present a predominance of oral language development delay, and that the male gender and partial seizure are risk factors for this age group.
CITATION STYLE
Melo, P. D. F., de Melo, A. N., & Maia, E. M. C. (2010). Transtornos de linguagem oral em crianças pré-escolares com epilepsia: Screening fonoaudiológico. Pro-Fono, 22(1), 55–60. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-56872010000100011
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