Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 1.3 Flashcards
What characterises disorder of written expression?
Writing skills significantly below expected level for childs age and intellectual capacity.
Common features of disorder of written expression
Spelling and grammatical errors
Punctuation error
Poor paragraph organisation
Poor handwriting
How many school-aged children have disorder of written expression?
2-8%
M:F ratio of disorder of written expression
3:1
Treatment of disorder of written expression
Direct practice in spelling and sentence writing
Review of grammatical rules
Intensive and continuous administration of individually tailored, 1:1 expressive and creative writing therapy
How many school-aged children have difficulty with maths
6%
Gender differences in difficulties with Maths
More common in females
What is mathematics disorder associated with?
Visuo-spatial deficits
Right parietal dysfunction
Common features of mathematics disorder
Difficulty learning number names, remembering signs for addition/substraction, learning multiplication tables, translating word problems into computations and doing calculations at expected pace
Treatment for mathematics disorder
Combine teaching mathematics with continuous practice in solving problems.
What characterises Learning disorder not otherwise specified?
Does not meet criteria for any specific disorder but causes impairment and reflects learning abilities below those expected for a persons intelligence, education and age.
How does ICD 10 classify specific disorders of scholastic skills learning disorders?
Specific reading disorder
Specific writing disorder
Specific disorder or arithmetic skills
Mixed disorder of scholastic skills
Other developmental disorders of scholastic skills
Developmental disorder of scholastic skills unspecified
When is expressive language disorder diagnosed?
When child demonstrates selective deficit in expressive language development relative to receptive language skills and nonverbal intelligence
What is a child with expressive language disorder likely to function low in?
Acquired vocab
Correct tense usage
Complex sentence construction
Word Recall
Prevalence of expressive language disorder in children
3-5%
M:F ratio of expressive language disorder
2-3:1
Which group of children is expressive language disorder most common?
Children whose relatives have a hx of phonological disorder or other communication disorders
Most common comorbid disorder with expressive language disorder
ADHD
Anxiety
ODD
Conduct disorder
Management of expressive language disorder
Special education
Speech Therapy
Essential clinical feature of mixed receptive-expressive language disorder
Significant impairment in both language comprehension and language expression
Features of mixed receptive-expressive language disorder
Delayed and below-normal ability to comprehend verbal or sign language but have age appropriate nonverbal intelligence
Prevalence of mixed receptive-expressive language disorder in school-aged children
3%
M:F ratio of mixed receptive-expressive language disorder
2:1
What happens in phonoogical disorder?
Delayed in producing speech sounds as expected for their age and intelligence. Not due to physical problems.
How do children with phonoogical disorder present?
Unable to articulate phonemes correctly
May distort or substitute or even omit affected phonemes
What is stuttering?
Normal flow of speech is disrupted by involuntary speech motor events
Which syllables do people who stutter usually struggle with?
Initial syllables
M:F ratio of stuttering?
3:1
Prevalence of stuttering in general popilation
1%
Typical age of onset of stuttering
2-7 years
How many children who stutter resolve spontaneously?
50-80%
How many adults are affected with stuttering?
1-2%
School-aged children have increased incidence of what?
Social anxiety
School refusal
Adolescents who stutter have increased incidence of what?
Social isolation
Aetiology of stuttering
Genetic
Incomplete cerebral dominance
Hyperdopaminergic state
Management of stuttering
Speech therapy
What characterises tourette syndrome?
Multiple motor and one or more vocal tics present for at least one year causing distress and impaired function
Duration of tics for tourettes
Many times a day, nearly every day or intermittently throughout a period of more than 1 year, and during this period there was never a tic-free period of more than 3 consecutive months
When do vocal tics begin in tourettes?
1-2 years after onset of motor sx
What type of tics are crucial for diagnosis of tourettes?
Vocal tics
How many people with tourettes have echolalia or echopraxia
10%