Intellectual Disability and Psychiatric Diagnoses of Children and Adolescents with a History of Stressful Events and Social Deprivation in Brazil: Preliminary Results. IQ, Depression and Stress

Authors

  • Paula Approbato de Oliveira The Equilibrium Project (TEP) - Institute and Department of Psychiatry (IPq), Medical School, USP, Brazil
  • Carolina Fuentes Moreira Psychology & Neuropsychology Unit, Institute and Department of Psychiatry (IPq), Medical School, USP, Brazil
  • Sandra Scivoletto Psychiatric Service for Childhood and Adolescence (SEPIA), Institute and Department of Psychiatry (IPq), Medical School, USP, Brazil
  • Cristiana Castanho de Almeida Rocca Psychology & Neuropsychology Unit, Institute and Department of Psychiatry (IPq), Medical School, USP, Brazil
  • Daniel Fuentes Psychology & Neuropsychology Unit, Institute and Department of Psychiatry (IPq), Medical School, USP, Brazil
  • Paulo Jannuzzi Cunha Laboratory of Psychiatric Neuroimaging (LIM-21/NAPNA), Department of Psychiatry, Medical School, University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6000/2292-2598.2014.02.01.5

Keywords:

Stress, children, adolescent, IQ, depression, intellectual disability

Abstract

Background: Studies have shown that stressful events in childhood are associated with impairments in cognitive functions and intellectual disability.

Objective: Compare the intellectual functioning in groups of Brazilian children and adolescents with a history of stressful events with lifetime history of depression and without lifetime history of depression.

Method: 30 children and adolescents underwent psychiatric evaluation and neuropsychological assessment of estimated intellectual quotient (EIQ), verbal knowledge, and visuospatial skills.

Results: 15 patients (50%) had EIQ within the average and 6 had EIQ in the lower average (20%) for Brazilian standardized norms. The other part had at least some degree of intellectual disability and they were classified as: 2 mild mental retardation (6.7%) and 7 borderline (23.3%). Also, half of the sample had at least one lifetime depressive episode, and the performance in EIQ and visuospatial skills was worse in this group.

Conclusion: 50% of the children and adolescents with a history of early stressful events and social deprivation had at least some degree of intellectual disability. In addition, a subgroup with history of depressive episodes had worse EIQ performance when compared to those without depression, possibly due to a greater impairment in visuospatial skills. The specific role of impaired right cerebral hemisphere, corpus callosum, and prefrontal cortex associated with depressive disorders and maltreatment should be investigated in further studies.

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Published

2014-05-06

How to Cite

Oliveira, P. A. de, Moreira, C. F., Scivoletto, S., Rocca, C. C. de A., Fuentes, D., & Cunha, P. J. (2014). Intellectual Disability and Psychiatric Diagnoses of Children and Adolescents with a History of Stressful Events and Social Deprivation in Brazil: Preliminary Results. IQ, Depression and Stress. Journal of Intellectual Disability - Diagnosis and Treatment, 2(1), 42–45. https://doi.org/10.6000/2292-2598.2014.02.01.5

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General Articles