The COVID-19 pandemic has drastically reduced physical activity (PA) behaviors of many people. Physical education (PE) is considered one of the privileged instruments to promote youths’ PA. We aimed to investigate the effects of lockdown on PE teachers’ behaviors promoting their students’ out-of-school PA and differences between three European countries. A sample of 1146 PE teachers (59.5% females) from France, Italy, and Turkey answered an online questionnaire about guiding students to engage in out-of-school PA, helping them to set PA goals, encouraging in self-monitoring PA, the pedagogical formats of these behaviors and feedback asked to students. RM-MANCOVAs were performed with a two-time (before and during the lockdown), three country (France, Italy, Turkey), two gender factorial design, using teaching years and perceived health as covariates. A significant multivariate main effect time × country × gender (p < 0.001) was reported for the behaviors promoting students’ PA, with French and Italian teachers increasing some behaviors, while Turkish teachers showing opposite trends. Significant multivariate main effects time × country were found for formats supporting the behaviors (p < 0.001) and for asked feedback formats (p < 0.001). The massive contextual change imposed by lockdown caused different reactions in teachers from the three countries. Findings are informative for PA promotion and PE teachers’ education.
Benign macrocephaly of infancy is a common problem in the child neurology practice. The radiologic features of this entity are not well defined. In most of the previous studies, macrocephalic patients were evaluated by computed tomography. To define the radiologic characteristics of this entity, 20 children with macrocephaly with normal neurologic examinations were enrolled in the study. All the patients were evaluated by magnetic resonance imaging studies. Sixty-five percent of patients had enlargement of the subarachnoid space and 35% of patients had megalencephaly. None of the patients had subdural collections. The mean age of patients with enlargement of the subarachnoid space was found to be younger than those with megalencephaly. The cases with parental histories of macrocephaly demonstrated both enlargement of the subarachnoid space and megalencephaly. Our results suggest that the radiologic finding of benign macrocephaly can be both enlargement of the subarachnoid space and megalencephaly.
QT dispersion is increased in patients with breath-holding spells, and this finding justifies further investigation for rhythm abnormalities and autonomic dysfunction in this patient group.
Aim: Epilepsy is a common paroxysmal disorder in childhood. Tachyarrhythmia, bradyarrhythmia, asystole, atrioventricular block, ventricular fibrillation or sudden death may occur during seizures. Mutations of ion‐channel coding genes are found in patients with idiopathic or cryptogenic epilepsy. The ion channels also play a role in arrhythmogenesis. QT dispersion is a non‐invasive method for assessment of regional repolarization differences within the myocardial tissue. This study investigated QT and QTc dispersion (QTcd) and the risk of dysrhythmia in epileptic children. Methods: The first group included 28 patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy and not taking antiepileptic treatment (range 10 mo to 15 y, mean ± SD 6.86 ± 3.92 y), the second group included 34 patients taking antiepileptic treatment (range 1–14 y, mean ± SD 7.51 ± 3.68y) and the control group included 52 healthy children (range 4 mo to 15 y, mean ± SD 6.94 ± 3.92 y). Twelve‐lead ECGs were obtained and heart rate, RR interval, P wave amplitude and duration, PR interval, QRS duration, QRS axis and QT intervals were measured, and QTc, QTd, QTcd were calculated in all subjects. The measurements were repeated in the first group under antiepileptic treatment. Results: While no significant difference in terms of heart rate, RR interval, P wave amplitude and duration, PR interval, QRS duration, QRS axis, QT intervals or QTc intervals was found, QTd and QTcd values were significantly increased in epileptic children compared with the control group. QTd was 58.1 ± 13.4 ms and 35.9 ± 9.3 ms and QTcd was 91.0 ± 22.9 and 68.6 ± 18.0 ms in patients and controls, respectively. Antiepileptic treatment did not affect QT dispersion.
Conclusion: QT dispersion is increased in epileptic children. Further investigation is needed to reveal the pathogenesis of myocardial repolarization abnormalities in epileptic patients.
To investigate the value of the auditory brainstem response as a reliable test for the neurologic prognosis of infants with neonatal indirect hyperbilirubinemia, auditory brainstem response studies were performed in 22 infants. The patients were followed up until 12 months of age. Two patients demonstrated pathologic auditory brainstem response consistent with auditory neuropathy but had no neurologic finding except a lack of speech at 12 months of age. Two other patients had neurologic sequelae, one showing severe dyskinetic cerebral palsy, the other mild hypotonia and motor retardation, but their auditory brainstem response results were normal. These results suggested that auditory brainstem response examination might not provide reliable information for the neurologic prognosis. Neurologic disturbances resulting from bilirubin neurotoxicity can be seen in patients with a normal auditory brainstem response, but patients with an abnormal auditory brainstem response may not have any neurologic dysfunction apart from speech retardation.
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