The Neurovegetative Status of Children 5-7 Years Old

The purpose of the article is to reveal the peculiarities of the neurovegetative status of children of senior preschool age. The article exposes the importance of the autonomic nervous system, features of electrical activity, cerebral blood flow on functioning of the child’s body. Childhood is a sen...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBrain. Broad research in artificial intelligence and neuroscience Vol. 13; no. 4; pp. 421 - 435
Main Authors Kolesnyk, Anna, Barna, Christina, Kashuba, Liudmila, Biriukova, Tetiana, Rudenko, Tetiana, Khrabra, Svitlana
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published EduSoft publishing 01.12.2022
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:The purpose of the article is to reveal the peculiarities of the neurovegetative status of children of senior preschool age. The article exposes the importance of the autonomic nervous system, features of electrical activity, cerebral blood flow on functioning of the child’s body. Childhood is a sensitive period of development of many neurophysiological and physiological functions. In children the electrical activity of the brain can be considered as an indicator of general properties of the nervous system and takes the leading place in the structure of the neurodynamic constitution of a person and some individual-psychological differences underlying them. Prolonged psycho-emotional overstrain, a high level of personal anxiety in children and the etiological factor cause increased activity of adaptation-compensatory reactions, in which the most important role is played by the autonomic nervous system. Disturbances of neurovegetative regulation, occurring practically in all diseases, under the influence of a huge number of damaging factors are nonspecific, adaptive-compensatory. In children, psycho-vegetative syndrome, characterized by a combination of psycho-emotional and vegetative disorders is encountered in most cases.
ISSN:2068-0473
2067-3957
DOI:10.18662/brain/13.4/396