Author:
Peña Marcela,Jara Cristina,Flores Juan C.,Hoyos-Bachiloglu Rodrigo,Iturriaga Carolina,Medina Mariana,Carcey Javier,Espinoza Janyra,Bohmwald Karen,Kalergis Alexis M.,Borzutzky Arturo
Abstract
AbstractHuman respiratory syncytial virus infection is a leading cause of pediatric morbidity and mortality. A previous murine study showed that during severe acute respiratory infections the virus invades the central nervous system, and that infected animals evolve with long-lasting learning difficulties associated with long-term potentiation impairment in their hippocampus. We hypothesized here that human infants who presented a severe episode of respiratory syncytial virus infection before 6 months of age would develop long-term learning difficulties. We measured the acquisition of the native phoneme repertoire during the first year, a milestone in early human development, comprising a reduction in the sensitivity to the irrelevant nonnative phonetic information and an increase in the sensitivity to the information relevant for the native one. We found that infants with a history of severe respiratory infection by the human respiratory syncytial virus presented poor distinction of native and nonnative phonetic contrasts at 6 months of age, and remained atypically sensitive to nonnative contrasts at 12 months, which associated with weak communicative abilities. Our results uncover previously unknown long-term language learning difficulties associated with a single episode of severe respiratory infection by the human respiratory syncytial virus, which could relate to memory impairments.
Funder
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Interdisciplinary
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Puente
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
19 articles.
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