Central nervous system (CNS) prophylaxis involving cranial irradiation has frequently been found to result in cognitive deficits in survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. The existence of this effect is still controversial, however, as is the question of factors that might affect its severity. The literature is surveyed and a meta-analysis undertaken on 30 IQ comparisons, which shows a substantial average decrement in irradiated subjects. The effect is larger when radiation is administered at a younger age and appears to be progressive. The effect may comprise two elements, one common to young cancer patients and one specific to CNS prophylaxis.
Prophylactic treatment of the central nervous system (CNS) with cranial irradiation and antineoplastic drugs has made childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) a survivable disease, but at the same time there have been many reports of iatrogenic effects, including deficits in cognitive functioning. Previous research suggests a particular effect on the Freedom from Distractibility factor of the WISC-R, memory, and attention. These particular abilities are tested in a group of 43 ALL survivors, with comparisons against solid tumor as well as sibling controls. The results indicate that four cognitive processes are affected by CNS prophylaxis for ALL: short-term memory, speed of processing, visuomotor coordination, and sequencing ability. Younger children have a more severe speed of processing deficit and children treated with a less rigorous protocol appear to be slightly less affected generally. The specific cognitive deficits found are related to neurological evidence on both theoretical and empirical grounds. Results suggest that children who have received CNS prophylaxis are able to learn, but may be slower to acquire new material and may benefit from bimodal presentation.
We assessed neuropsychologically 106 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who had all received cranial irradiation for the prevention of central nervous system (CNS) leukemia 1-13 years previously. Children were assessed for adverse late effects of their therapy, using age-appropriate Wechsler measures of overall intellectual ability and supplementary tests. Forty-five siblings near in age to the patients were tested as controls. The patients who had had the most intensive central nervous system (CNS) prophylaxis were found to have a WISC-R Full Scale IQ 17 points lower than the sibling control group. Performance IQ was more affected than verbal IQ. The patients were more easily distracted and less able to concentrate. The severity of the aftereffects was related to younger age at the time of CNS prophylaxis and to a higher dose of cranial irradiation but not to time since CNS prophylaxis. CNS prophylaxis using a combination of cranial irradiation and intrathecal methotrexate has lowered the incidence of CNS relapse in childhood ALL but is associated with considerable long-term morbidity in survivors.
This article reports the possible clinical implications of an empirical examination of mental representations, in particular that of maternal representations before and after the birth of a first child. The study investigates maternal representations including the mental organization of perceptions, thoughts and feelings of priminparous women during the third trimester (seventh month) of pregnancy and four months postbirth. We focus on the representations that a woman has of herself, her baby, of her partner, herself as mother and her own mother during pregnancy and the impact of a major life event, namely the birth of the child on those representations.
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