Posted on 30 November 2009. Tags: 18 months of age, 2009, age, autism, behavior, child, health, iq, language skills, miriam falco, research, researchers, study, toddler
By Miriam Falco, CNN
November 30, 2009 1:49 a.m. EST
Researchers have shown for the first time that if a child is diagnosed with autism as early as 18 months of age, offering the toddler age-appropriate, effective therapy can lead to raised IQ levels and improved language skills and behavior.
http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/conditions/11/30/autism.study/
Posted in Blog
Posted on 30 November 2009. Tags: autism, autistic, child, mother, online, parent, progress, tool
HILLSBOROUGH (CBS 5) ―
The mother of an autistic child developed an online tool that helps parents track their children’s progress and may aid scientists in the search for a solution.
http://cbs5.com/local/charm.autism.tracker.2.1330241.html
Posted in Blog
Posted on 16 November 2009. Tags: adult, adulthood, autism, children, eric adler, jennifer smith-currier, kansas city star, school
By ERIC ADLER
The Kansas City Star
Each year, tens of thousands of children diagnosed with autism, from mild to severe, enter adulthood and leave the safe confines of schools and their services behind.Every day, their parents, such as Jennifer Smith-Currier of Gardner, worry what will become of them.
http://www.kansascity.com/105/story/1569350.html
Posted in Blog
Posted on 11 November 2009. Tags: autism, autistict, chronic stress comparible, combat, fatigue, michelle diament, mother, reasearch, soldier, work interruptions
By Michelle Diament
November 10, 2009
Mothers of adolescents and adults with autism experience chronic stress comparable to combat soldiers and struggle with frequent fatigue and work interruptions, new research finds. These moms also spend significantly more time caregiving than moms of those without disabilities. Researchers followed a group of moms of adolescents and adults with autism for eight days in a row. Moms were interviewed at the end of each day about their experiences and on four of the days researchers measured the moms’ hormone levels to assess their stress.
http://www.disabilityscoop.com/2009/11/10/autism-moms-stress/6121/
Posted in Blog
Posted on 11 November 2009. Tags: american, asperger, autism, boy, children, claudia, diagnosis, girl, identity, psychiatry, study, syndrome, vanishing, wallis
A Powerful Identity, a Vanishing Diagnosis
By CLAUDIA WALLIS
Published: November 2, 2009
It is one of the most intriguing labels in psychiatry. Children with Asperger’s syndrome, a mild form of autism, are socially awkward and often physically clumsy, but many are verbal prodigies, speaking in complex sentences at early ages, reading newspapers fluently by age 5 or 6 and acquiring expertise in some preferred topic — stegosaurs, clipper ships, Interstate highways — that will astonish adults and bore their playmates to tears.
In recent years, this once obscure diagnosis, given to more than four times as many boys as girls, has become increasingly common.

Much of the growing prevalence of autism, which now affects about 1 percent of American children, according to federal data, can be attributed to Asperger’s and other mild forms of the disorder. And Asperger’s has exploded into popular culture through books and films depicting it as the realm of brilliant nerds and savantlike geniuses.
But no sooner has Asperger consciousness awakened than the disorder seems headed for psychiatric obsolescence. Though it became an official part of the medical lexicon only in 1994, the experts who are revising psychiatry’s diagnostic manual have proposed to eliminate it from the new edition, due out in 2012.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/03/health/03asperger.html?_r=1
Posted in Blog
Posted on 23 October 2009. Tags: amy norton, autism, autistic, genes, research, reuters, reuters health, study, twins
By: Amy Norton
Reuters Health
When one identical twin develops the developmental disorder autism, the risk of the other developing it is high — substantially higher than it is for fraternal twins, a new study confirms. The study, which gathered information from 277 twin pairs in which at least one had an autistic disorder, found that when one identical twin developed an autistic disorder, the other one also did 88 percent of the time.
http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE59L4MW20091022
Posted in Blog
Posted on 20 October 2009. Tags: autism, child, children, mercury, normal, reuters
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -
Children with autism have mercury levels similar to those of other kids, suggesting the mysterious disorder is caused by a range of factors rather than “a single smoking gun,” researchers said on Monday. The researchers at the University of California, Davis, initially found that children aged 2 to 5 with autism had mercury levels lower than other children because the autistic kids ate less fish, the biggest source of mercury that shows up in the blood.
http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE59I4W020091019
Posted in Blog
Posted on 12 October 2009. Tags: autism, Blog, diane stephenson, neurological disorder, pfizer
By Lee Howard
Diane Stephenson of Groton has three tangible reasons for wanting to know as much as possible about autism. Stephenson, associate research fellow at Pfizer Inc.’s Groton laboratories who helped start an autism research unit there earlier this year, has two nephews and a niece with the neurological disorder, which is often accompanied by language difficulties, behavioral problems, sleep interruptions, poor eye contact and low social skills.
http://www.theday.com/re.aspx?re=019e5c81-642a-4600-90e6-dd5846d3fd22
Posted in Blog
Follow Us!