Fisioterapia em Movimento (Oct 2018)

Motor development’s curves of premature infants on the first year of life according to Alberta Infant Motor Scale

  • Raquel Saccani,
  • Nadia Cristina Valentini,
  • Keila Ruttnig Guidony Pereira,
  • Cibelle Kayenne Martins Roberto Formiga,
  • Maria Beatriz Martins Linhares

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-5918.031.ao39
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. 0

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction: The motor trajectory of pre-term children is an important indicator of health during infancy, since alterations may be a signal for the need of professional intervention. Objective: To describe percentiles and motor development curves for Brazilian preterm infants in the first year of life, determining the reference values for categorization of motor performance assessed by the AIMS. Methods: Participated in this cross-sectional study 976 children born pre-term, newly-born to 12 months of corrected age. The Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS) was used to assess participants’ motor development. The scores of the Brazilian norms were used as comparison criteria. Results: Children born pre-term showed lower scores compared to children born full-term indicating the need for a specific percentile curve for that population. The scores differentiated at P1 to P99 percentiles allowing for the categorization of children with typical development, at risk and with atypical development. At 0, 4, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 months an overlapping of extreme percentiles (P1, P5 and P10; P90, P95 and P99) was observed, but not in the other percentiles. Conclusion: The percentiles described indicate that preterm children presented lower motor performance than full-term children and AIMS has discriminant power for the clinical evaluation of these children. The developmental curves showed lower capacity for behavioral differentiation in the extreme percentiles.

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