Intelligence in children with moyamoya disease: evaluation after surgical treatments with special reference to changes in cerebral blood flow.
- 1 September 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 15 (5), 873-877
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.15.5.873
Abstract
The effect of surgical treatment upon the intelligence of 20 children with moyamoya disease was evaluated and related to changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF). The patients were treated by various surgical revascularization procedures, mainly by encephalo-myo-synangiosis. Intelligence was tested using the Wechsler intelligence scale for children (WISC) in 19 children and the Wechsler adult intelligence scale (WAIS) in one child. Measurements of regional CBF were performed by a 133Xe inhalation method. In the preoperative state, the degree of reduction in the intelligence quotient (IQ) correlated well with the age of the patients; the older patients revealed a more marked reduction of IQ, and the patients with lower intelligence scores in general showed a tendency for more marked depression of mean CBF. Postoperatively, most of the patients showed increase in IQ, especially in performance IQ which improved significantly in 10 patients, remained unchanged in 3 and deteriorated in 2. Mean CBF increased by an ...This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Treatment of Moyamoya Disease by Temporal Muscle Graft Encephalo-Myo-Synangiosis’Pediatric Neurosurgery, 1983
- Computed Tomography in Moyamoya DiseaseJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1982
- A new surgical treatment of moyamoya disease in children: A preliminary reportSurgical Neurology, 1981
- Encephalo-myo-synangiosis (EMS) in Moyamoya DiseaseNeurologia medico-chirurgica, 1981
- Electroencephalographic Findings in Children With Moyamoya DiseaseArchives of Neurology, 1979
- Moyamoya DiseaseNeurologia medico-chirurgica, 1979
- Treatment of moyamoya disease with STA-MCA anastomosisJournal of Neurosurgery, 1978
- Regional Cerebral Blood Flow by 133 Xenon InhalationStroke, 1975
- Progressive alternating hemiplegia in early childhood with basal arterial stenosis and telangiectasia (moyamoya syndrome)Neurology, 1973
- Progressive cerebral arterial occlusive disease: Analysis of 27 casesNeuroradiology, 1972