Aim: To investigate whether motor performance in school-age children without cerebral palsy (CP), cooled for neonatal encephalopathy, is associated with perinatal factors and 18-month developmental scores and to explore relationships between school-age motor and cognitive performance.
Methods: Motor and cognitive performance was assessed in 29 previously cooled children at six to eight years using the Movement Assessment Battery for Children-2 (MABC-2) and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-IV). Associations between MABC-2 scores less than/equal (≤) 15th centile and perinatal factors, social/family background, 18-month Bayley-III scores and WISC-IV scores were explored.
Results: Eleven of the 29 (38%) children had MABC-2 scores ≤15th centile including 7 (24%) ≤5th centile. No significant perinatal or socio-economic risk factors were identified. Motor scores <85 at 18 months failed to identify children with MABC-2 scores ≤15th centile. MABC-2 scores ≤15th centile were associated with lower Full Scale IQ (p = 0.045), Working Memory (p = 0.03) and Perceptual Reasoning (p = 0.005) scores at six to eight years and receiving greater support in school (p = 0.01).
Conclusion: A third of cooled children without CP had MABC-2 scores indicating motor impairment at school age that was not identified at 18 months by Bayley-III. Most children with low MABC scores needed support at school. Sub-optimal MABC-2 scores indicate need for detailed school-age cognitive evaluation.
Keywords: Bayley-III; MABC-2; Neonatal encephalopathy; Therapeutic hypothermia; WISC-IV.
©2019 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.