Eighteen children with right- and 13 with left-sided congenital hemiplegia were compared with 19 normal age-matched controls for verbal and non-verbal function. CT scans were obtained from 27 of the 31 hemiplegic children. The two hemiplegic groups were impaired in non-verbal function compared with controls. The right-hemiplegic group was more impaired in verbal function than the left-hemiplegic group and controls; however, impairments were restricted to the girls in the right-hemiplegic group. The results are discussed in terms of cerebral plasticity and functional reorganisation of cognitive functions after an early unilateral injury. It is argued that girls with left-hemisphere lesions may be more limited in cerebral plasticity than boys.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Carlsson1994
%A Carlsson, G.
%A Uvebrant, P.
%A Hugdahl, K.
%A Arvidsson, J.
%A Wiklund, L. M.
%A von Wendt, L.
%D 1994
%J Dev Med Child Neurol
%K Adolescent; Brain Diseases; Cerebral Palsy; Child; Female; Functional Laterality; Hemiplegia; Humans; Intelligence; Male; Neuropsychological Tests; Speech Disorders
%N 6
%P 503--512
%T Verbal and non-verbal function of children with right- versus left-hemiplegic cerebral palsy of pre- and perinatal origin.
%V 36
%X Eighteen children with right- and 13 with left-sided congenital hemiplegia were compared with 19 normal age-matched controls for verbal and non-verbal function. CT scans were obtained from 27 of the 31 hemiplegic children. The two hemiplegic groups were impaired in non-verbal function compared with controls. The right-hemiplegic group was more impaired in verbal function than the left-hemiplegic group and controls; however, impairments were restricted to the girls in the right-hemiplegic group. The results are discussed in terms of cerebral plasticity and functional reorganisation of cognitive functions after an early unilateral injury. It is argued that girls with left-hemisphere lesions may be more limited in cerebral plasticity than boys.
@article{Carlsson1994,
abstract = {Eighteen children with right- and 13 with left-sided congenital hemiplegia were compared with 19 normal age-matched controls for verbal and non-verbal function. CT scans were obtained from 27 of the 31 hemiplegic children. The two hemiplegic groups were impaired in non-verbal function compared with controls. The right-hemiplegic group was more impaired in verbal function than the left-hemiplegic group and controls; however, impairments were restricted to the girls in the right-hemiplegic group. The results are discussed in terms of cerebral plasticity and functional reorganisation of cognitive functions after an early unilateral injury. It is argued that girls with left-hemisphere lesions may be more limited in cerebral plasticity than boys.},
added-at = {2014-07-19T19:13:47.000+0200},
author = {Carlsson, G. and Uvebrant, P. and Hugdahl, K. and Arvidsson, J. and Wiklund, L. M. and von Wendt, L.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/243215b4021e7eb04a0266bc81c756f17/ar0berts},
groups = {public},
interhash = {0c0f308d02c887682abba1ce271710a1},
intrahash = {43215b4021e7eb04a0266bc81c756f17},
journal = {Dev Med Child Neurol},
keywords = {Adolescent; Brain Diseases; Cerebral Palsy; Child; Female; Functional Laterality; Hemiplegia; Humans; Intelligence; Male; Neuropsychological Tests; Speech Disorders},
month = Jun,
number = 6,
pages = {503--512},
pmid = {8005361},
timestamp = {2014-07-19T19:13:47.000+0200},
title = {Verbal and non-verbal function of children with right- versus left-hemiplegic cerebral palsy of pre- and perinatal origin.},
username = {ar0berts},
volume = 36,
year = 1994
}