Study Supports Theory Why Brain-Injured Children Often Recover
The finding, says Jerzy Szaflarski, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of neurology at the UC Academic Health Center, suggests that as a child grows more language proficient, recalling words may involve less effort.
It also supports earlier explanations as to why young children who injure a large part of one side of the brain often recover completely, or almost completely.
Funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the study will be presented April 6 at the annual meeting of the
The decrease in activity sites may mean that language areas in the brain are more flexible when children are younger and become more specialized as they mature, Dr. Szaflarski says.
This raises hope for rehabilitation of brain function in children after stroke or traumatic brain injuries, he says.
Dr. Szaflarski and senior coauthor Scott Holland, PhD, a UC professor who also heads pediatric brain-imaging research at Cincinnati Childrens
They concluded that more brain areas are involved during a language exercise in a 5-year-old than in an 11-year-old.
The children used in the study were healthy, native English-speakers. During fMRI scanning,
each child was given a list of nouns and told to think of verbs or actions that would go with them. For example, the word ball could have throw or kick before it.
The children listened through earphones as the words were read to them five seconds apart. The fMRI monitored their brain activity as they silently thought of actions associated with the words.
To break the chain of thought associated with individual words, the children were told to tap their fingers after each onegiving researchers a control to separate each brain scan during verb generation.
The fMRI images showed larger areas and more sites of activity in the brains of the younger children. But, as the childs brain matured, Dr. Holland says, the number of activity sites decreased and concentrated more on the left side of the brain.
The researchers earlier studies of both children and adults showed that language-related brain activity increased on the dominant side of childrens brains, which is typically the left side in right-handed people. Adults over 25 showed a decrease in language-related brain activity on the dominant side and a more even pattern in both sides of the brain.
Dr. Szaflarski is a member of
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