scholarly journals Opóźnienia w funkcjonowaniu językowym jako wczesny symptom zaburzeń w rozwoju dziecka1

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 359-373
Author(s):  
Justyna Leszka

Human linguistic development is constitutionally conditioned and is achieved through contact with adult language users. All children follow the same rules and stages in the development of speech. The knowledge of their course and consequences enables early recognition of deviations from the norm, which may be delayed speech development or a symptom of other, often serious developmental disorders. The analysis of the research results shows that the most common reason for parents’ seeking diagnosis and therapeutic support is an incorrect linguistic functioning of the child. Diagnostic procedures often end with the diagnosis of other developmental disorders in which linguistic retardation was an early symptom. Therefore, it is legitimate to increase social knowledge and sensitivity of parents and specialists in monitoring the linguistic development of children under 3 years of age.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-39
Author(s):  
Angyap Lyn Saipen ◽  
Bernard Demot ◽  
Lowella De Leon

The rainy season in the Philippines is from June to October; this is when the number of dengue cases typically increases. In 2020 during this time, the world was facing the threat of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and dengue viral infections have similar presentations and laboratory findings, including fever and thrombocytopenia, and there have been reports of coinfection with SARS-CoV-2 and arthropod-borne virus. Here, we report a case of SARS-CoV-2–dengue virus coinfection in the Philippines in a female aged 62 years, whose early symptom was fever and who was positive for SARS-CoV-2 and positive for dengue. Early recognition of such coinfection is important so that proper measures can be taken in the management of the patient.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 1053-1054
Author(s):  
HERMAN YANNET

The causes for the failure of adequate speech development in children include deafness of varying degrees and types, mental deficiency, infantile autism, auditory aphasia, and serious emotional disorders related usually to social deprivation. Since the therapeutic approach as well as the prognosis varies greatly in these different conditions, early differential diagnosis is of paramount importance. This book, actually a rather short monograph of some 80 pages (approx imately 20,000 words), summarizes the various clinical features and diagnostic procedures involved in the differential diagnosis.


2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 32-41
Author(s):  
U.B. Pavlova ◽  
T.U. Khotyleva

This methodological manual is created based on analysis of many years of experience of teachers working with children with developmental disorders. The manual is aimed at getting pre-school children or first graders with speech and communication difficulties leading to academic failure ready for school. Сontinued. Beginning in № 1 (46), 2015


Author(s):  
Ewa Gacka

In the paper, the results of the study of secondary speech therapy prophylaxis aimed at children with low birth weight (preterm babies and babies born at term but with intrauterine growth retardation). The study group consisted of 187 children with a birth weight below 2500 g. Low birth weight is one of the risk factors for various developmental disorders, including disorders of the development of language communication. That is why early identification of the first symptoms of language acquisition (speech development) disorders is so important. The aim of the undertaken research was to analyse the activities in the field of secondary speech therapy prophylaxis, covering this risk group.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-15
Author(s):  
Sidney Q. Cohlan ◽  
Shirley M. Stone

Of 33 patients with psychogenic cough tic, 31 were successfully treated using an unusual reinforced suggestion technique. The cough usually follows an incidental upper respiratory tract infection and persists as a loud paroxysmal barking or honking sound for weeks to months. Paroxysms occur all day but cease with sleep. The diagnosis is often delayed for weeks to months while the patient is exposed to an increasing intensity of diagnostic procedures and therapy. Thirty percent of some 20 patients previously reported in the literature had been hospitalized. The reinforced suggestion technique depends upon the physician's convincing the patient that the persistent cough has weakened the chest muscles, which are now unable to contain the cough, and that a bedsheet tightly wrapped around the chest will provide the necessary support to stop the cough within 24 to 48 hours. The typical patient can produce the cough on command, has an ambivalent response to the prospect of care, is unconcerned about his symptoms, submits willingly to the examination and procedures, and is kept out of school for the duration of the cough. Findings on physical examination are normal except for abnormal gag and corneal reflexes. The gag reflex was depressed in six and absent in 20 of the 31 patients. The corneal reflex was depressed in 16 and absent in 5 of the 31 patients. These abnormal responses help to corroborate the psychogenic etiology. Early recognition of the nonorganic nature of this syndrome will reduce parental anxiety, loss of school time, risk of iatrogenic complications, and unnecessary medical and hospital expense.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 526-554
Author(s):  
Elena Boder ◽  
Robert P. Sedgwick

This paper based on eight cases and a necropsy report presents a familial symptom complex speaking strongly for a syndrome entity, for which the term ataxiatelangiectasia was proposed by the authors in a preliminary report. The main features are progressive cerebellar ataxia with onset in infancy; progressive telangiectasia of the bulbar conjunctivae, simulating conjunctivitis, and of the butterfly area of the face; frequent sinopulmonary infection, including bronchiectasis; and peculiarity of eye movements, simulating ophthalmoplegia. The essential components of this familial syndrome are the ataxia and the telangiectasia, the most striking identifying feature being the characteristic telangiectases of the bulbar conjunctivae. Retardation of statural growth with significant dwarfing is a frequent feature. Intelligence is essentially normal, although difficulty with tests dependent upon visualmotor co-ordination is consistently observed from early childhood; test results show wide scatter and I.Q. scores tend to drop below normal range as the ataxia progresses. The available pneumoencephalograms give evidence of cerebellar atrophy. The necropsy provides microscopic evidence of progressive, apparently primary, diffuse, cortical cerebellar degeneration and of enlarged venules in the cerebellar leptomeninges and white matter, without significant changes in the spinal cord. Recent tests of blood and urine of four children have failed to show evidence of an aberration in metabolism of iron or copper. Urinary concentrations of lead have also been within normal limits. Electrophoretic studies of serum in two patients have demonstrated that concentrations of gamma globulin are normal. Ataxia-telangiectasia resists precise classification among the known entities of heredocerebellar ataxia. It is believed, however, that it may be properly viewed as a fifth entity in the group of phakomatoses, which presently is comprised of Von Recklinghausen's neurofibromatosis, tuberous sclerosis, Von Hippel-Lindau's disease and Sturge-Weber syndrome. Awareness of the symptom complex of ataxia-telangiectasia will enable the clinician to recognize its varied and seemingly unrelated manifestations as those of a single clinical entity and will eliminate extensive and unrewarding diagnostic procedures. Diagnosis will permit early recognition of the unusual susceptibility to sinopulmonary infections, so that appropriate antibiotic therapy can be promptly instituted in the management of acute episodes, or prophylactically. With the possible exception of a clinical report of a single, nonfamilial case published in French in 1941, no reports of this syndrome were found in the literature. Since the publication of our preliminary paper, however, an as yet unpublished report based on four cases similar to those reported here and two necropsies was given by Biemond, at the First International Congress of the Neurological Sciences in July, 1957.


2007 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 92-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta Hauser ◽  
Andrea Pfennig ◽  
Seza Özgürdal ◽  
Andreas Heinz ◽  
Michael Bauer ◽  
...  

AbstractBipolar disorders are frequently not diagnosed until long after their onset, leaving patients with no or correspondingly inadequate treatment. The course of the disorder is all the more severe and the negative repercussions for those affected all the greater. Concerted research effort is therefore going into learning how to recognize bipolar disorders at an early stage. Drawing on current research results, this paper presents considerations for an integrative Early Symptom Scale with which persons at risk can be identified and timely intervention initiated. This will require prospective studies to determine the predictive power of the risk factors integrated into the scale.


2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 57-65
Author(s):  
U.B. Pavlova ◽  
T.U. Khotyleva

This methodological manual is created based on analysis of many years of experience of teachers working with children with developmental disorders. The manual is aimed at getting pre-school children or first graders with speech and communication difficulties leading to academic failure ready for school Ending


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anett Vincze ◽  
János Gaál ◽  
Zoltán Griger

Abstract Purpose of Review This article provides an update on the most recent advances in epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnostic procedures, and therapeutic approaches for myositis-associated bone diseases, such as osteoporosis and bone fractures. Recent Findings In the recent years, several studies showed that osteoporosis and consequent fractures are a common and frequently underestimated complication in patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM). In younger patients, asymptomatic fractures might present in the early phase of the disease which could increase the risk of development of further fractures. High-risk patients could be selected with early application of combined diagnostic procedures, such as fracture risk scores with steroid dose adjustments and imaging. Summary Recent advances might help clinicians from different fields of medicine in the early recognition and management of myositis-associated osteoporosis, which will potentially improve the quality of life of patients with IIM.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Lyakso ◽  
Olga Frolova ◽  
Aleksey Grigorev ◽  
Viktor Gorodnyi ◽  
Aleksandr Nikolaev

The goal of this research is to study the speech strategies of adults’ interactions with 4–7-year-old children. The participants are “mother–child” dyads with typically developing (TD, n = 40) children, children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs, n = 20), Down syndrome (DS, n = 10), and “experimenter–orphan” pairs (n = 20). Spectrographic, linguistic, phonetic, and perceptual analyses (n = 465 listeners) of children’s speech and mothers’ speech (MS) are executed. The analysis of audio records by listeners (n = 10) and the elements of nonverbal behavior on the basis of video records by experts (n = 5) are made. Differences in the speech behavior strategies of mothers during interactions with TD children, children with ASD, and children with DS are revealed. The different strategies of “mother–child” interactions depending on the severity of the child’s developmental disorders and the child’s age are described. The same features of MS addressed to TD children with low levels of speech formation are used in MS directed to children with atypical development. The acoustic features of MS correlated with a high level of TD child speech development do not lead to a similar correlation in dyads with ASD and DS children. The perceptual and phonetic features of the speech of children of all groups are described.


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