Reading comprehension difficulties in children with rolandic epilepsy

Nicola Currie, Adina Raquel Lew, Thomas Michael Palmer, Helen Basu, Christian De Goede, Anand Iyer, Kate Cain

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (journal)peer-review

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Aim
Difficulties in reading comprehension can arise from either word reading or listening comprehension difficulties, or a combination of the two. We sought to determine whether children with rolandic epilepsy had poor reading comprehension relative to typically developing comparison children, and whether such difficulties were associated with word reading and/or general language comprehension difficulties.

Method
In this cross-sectional study, children with rolandic epilepsy (n=25; 16 males, 9 females; mean age 9y 1mo, SD 1y 7mo) and a comparison group (n=39; 25 males, 14 females; mean age 9y 1mo, SD 1y 3mo) completed assessments of reading comprehension, listening comprehension, word/non-word reading, speech articulation, and Non-verbal IQ.

Results
Reading comprehension and word reading were worse in children with rolandic epilepsy (F1,61=6.89, p=0.011, math formula=0.10 and F1,61=6.84, p=0.011, math formula=0.10 respectively), with listening comprehension being marginal (F1,61=3.81, p=0.055, math formula=0.06). Word reading and listening comprehension made large and independent contributions to reading comprehension, explaining 70% of the variance.

Interpretation
Children with rolandic epilepsy may be at risk of reading comprehension difficulties. Thorough assessment of individual children is required to ascertain whether the difficulties lie with decoding text, or with general comprehension skills, or both.

What this paper adds
Children with rolandic epilepsy may be at risk of poor reading comprehension.
This was related to poor word reading, poor listening comprehension, or both.
Reading comprehension interventions should be tailored to the profile of difficulties.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)275-282
JournalDevelopmental Medicine and Child Neurology
Volume60
Issue number3
Early online date14 Dec 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Mar 2018

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