The Effect of Oral Candidiasis on the Speech Production, Feeding Skills, and Self-Concept of Children and Adolescents With Symptomatic HIV Infection
NCT ID: NCT00001448
Last Updated: 2008-03-04
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
50 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
1995-08-31
2000-06-30
Brief Summary
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Children with HIV disease, ages 6-21 years, who have oral thrush are eligible to paricipate in the study. The child and his/her parent will be asked to complete a variety of measures at specific time intervals over approximately one month during visits to the National Institutes of Health for treatment on other protocols. First, a nurse will rate the location and severity of thrush in the child's mouth. Then the parent will complete questionnaires assessing the effect of oral thrush on the child's feeding and speech skills and everyday functioning. Finally, the child will be administered a brief speech and oral-motor evaluation and will complete some questionnaires about how the thrush affects his/her day-to-day activities and self-concept.
The results of this study may help to better understand the cause of expressive language deficits observed in some children with HIV infection. More specifically, it will determine if any speech and feeding problems of HIV-infected children are associated with oral thrush. Learning more about the impact of oral thrush on the speech, feeding, and the self-concept of children with HIV disease may be used for parent and patient education and to develop rehabilitative recommendations to benefit HIV-infected patients with oral thrush.
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Detailed Description
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The effect of oral candidiasis on the speech production, feeding skills, and self-concept of children and adolescents with HIV infection will be examined in this pilot study. Several disciplines (Neuropsychology, Speech, Nursing, and Infectious Disease) will be involved to investigate the severity of oral candidiasis on various aspects of everyday behavior.
Interdisciplinary assessment of the ramifications of oral thrush on speech production and feeding skills have not been conducted to date in children or adolescents infected with HIV. Most studies have assessed only single dimensions or functions such as language or they have yielded only descriptive data, for example, regarding the severity of oral thrush. This pilot study, however, will investigate the association between oral thrush and speech and feeding dysfunction using some newly-developed measures. The study will also examine whether oral candidiasis may influence the self-concept of children and adolescents with HIV infection.
Conditions
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Furthermore, patients who are identified by the speech pathologist to have oro-facial structural and/or functional abnormalities that cause a significant disturbance in speech, voice, or swallowing will be excluded.
Children will also not be able t participate in the study if they cannot understand the measures, even if the questions are read to them, which will be determined by the Neuropsychology staff.
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Cancer Institute (NCI)
NIH
Locations
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National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Countries
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References
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Epstein LG, Sharer LR, Oleske JM, Connor EM, Goudsmit J, Bagdon L, Robert-Guroff M, Koenigsberger MR. Neurologic manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus infection in children. Pediatrics. 1986 Oct;78(4):678-87.
Pressman H. Communication disorders and dysphagia in pediatric AIDS. ASHA. 1992 Jan;34(1):45-7. No abstract available.
Wolters PL, Brouwers P, Moss HA, Pizzo PA. Differential receptive and expressive language functioning of children with symptomatic HIV disease and relation to CT scan brain abnormalities. Pediatrics. 1995 Jan;95(1):112-9.
Other Identifiers
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95-C-0185
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: secondary_id
950185
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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