Neurology Specific Literature Search   
 
[home][thesaurus]
    
Click Here to return To Results

 

Effects of HIV on Cognitive & Motor Devel in Children Born to HIV-Seropositive Women with no Reported Drug Use:Birth-24 mo
Pediatrics 96:1078-1082, Gay,C.L.,et al, 1995
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
By 3 months of age,the mean mental and motor scores of the infected infants were significantly lower than those of the uninfected controls. Furthermore,the initial differences between the two groups increased over time,as many of the infected infants became increasingly delayed.Although the infected infants tended to perform more poorly than the uninfected infants,nearly one third of the infected infants exhibited relatively normal cognitive development and half demonstrated relatively normal motor development.Over the first 24 months of life,the mean rate of development of HIV-infected infants is significantly slower than that of noninfected infants born to seropositive mothers.This occurs even when the effects are not confounded with those of prenatal drug exposure.
 
Related Tags
(click to filter results - removes previous filter)

children
cognition
congenital infection,viral
developmental evaluation
developmental retardation
human immunodeficiency virus type 1
intellectual deficit
intrauterine
intrauterine infection
intrauterine infection,viral
intrauterine infection,viral of CNS
psychological testing
psychological testing,children
transplacental virus infections

Click Here to return To Results