Developmental outcomes after early prefrontal cortex damage.
Journal
  Brain and cognition.
Citation
  Brain Cogn. 55(1):84-103
Publication date
  2004 Jun
Authors
  Eslinger PJ
Flaherty-Craig CV
Benton AL
Investigators
  Paul N. Eslinger
MeSH headings
  Brain Damage, Chronic
Brain Mapping
Cognition Disorders
Frontal Lobe
Mood Disorders
Moral Development
MeSH qualifiers
  complications
etiology
physiopathology
Abstract
  The neuropsychological bases of cognitive, social, and moral development are minimally understood, with a seemingly wide chasm between developmental theories and brain maturation models. As one approach to bridging ideas in these areas, we review 10 cases of early prefrontal cortex damage from the clinical literature, highlighting overall clinical profiles and real life developmental outcomes. Based on these cases, there is preliminary evidence to support distinctive developmental differences after: (1) dorsolateral, (2) mesial, and (3) orbital-polar prefrontal lesions, for more profound impairments after bilateral damage, and possibly for recovery differences after very early vs. later childhood lesion onset. Further case and group studies are needed to confirm reliable effects of specific lesion locations, the influence of age of lesion onset, and related experiential and treatment variables in determining adult outcomes. Rather than a single underlying deficit associated with early prefrontal cortex damage, we interpret the findings to suggest that it is the altered integration and interplay of cognitive, emotional, self-regulatory, and executive/metacognitive deficits that contribute to diverse developmental frontal lobe syndromes. The findings support the fundamental importance of prefrontal cortex maturation in protracted cognitive, social-emotional, and moral development.