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Query: UMLS:C0004352 (
autism
)
32,579
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Delay in language development may be associated with an underlying anatomical, neurosensory, or
psychological disorder
such as: deafness, cerebral palsy, cleft palate,
autism
, or mental retardation. A condition called specific developmental language delay may occur in children devoid of any other identifiable disorder or developmental delay. Language delay associated with early onset, severe-to-profound hearing impairment has been well documented. Controversial studies have also appeared in the communicative disorders' literature suggesting that fluctuating conductive hearing loss in early childhood can significantly affect the development of language and related academic skills. Some authors have claimed that these deleterious effects can be irreversible. This study focuses on 3 groups of preschool children, in whom hearing acuity has been documented: One group with recurrent otitis and language delay; a second group with an equally well documented otitis history but without language delay; and a third group with documented language delay in the absence of any known predisposing conditions, including early-onset, recurrent otitis media. Prenatal, birth and developmental histories of the children in each group were compared in detail to identify any factors which may enhance or ameliorate the effects of fluctuating conductive hearing loss on language development. In a population of 1864 children (ages 9-59 months) referred for otolaryngologic and/or communicative evaluation, 480 otherwise normal children (67.6% males; 32.4% females) were found to have a history of early-onset, recurrent otitis media and/or delayed speech and language development on the basis of an extensive evaluation battery. This population was further subdivided into 3 groups (I = otitis-positive/normal language; II = otitis-positive/language delay; and III = otitis-free/language delay). Among the 329 children with positive histories for early otitis media (Groups I & II), a significantly higher percentage of those demonstrating language delay were from homes in the lower socio-economic category. Race and sex showed no significant relationship to language delay among the otitis-positive groups, although males were twice as numerous as females in the over-all study population. Articulation errors on speech measures and borderline delays in other developmental milestones (standing, walking, and toilet training) were also significantly greater in the language-delayed group when compared with otitis-positive children whose language was age-appropriate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Medical profile of the language-delayed child: otitis-prone versus otitis-free. 358 81
This paper reports on the correlates of
psychiatric illness
in children with speech and language disorders. Of 600 children selected from a community speech clinic, 50% were found to have diagnosable psychiatric disorders according to DSM-III criteria. These "psychiatrically ill" children were compared to the "psychiatrically well" children in the sample on a variety of developmental, socioeconomic, medical, and psychosocial factors. Although some differences were found between the well and ill children in other factors, the majority of the differences, and the most highly significant differences, were found in areas of linguistic functioning. It is hypothesized that this finding may be relevant not only to understanding the association between linguistic and psychiatric functioning but also to predicting the outcome and planning treatment for childhood speech and language disorders.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 1987 Dec
PMID:Factors associated with the development of psychiatric illness in children with early speech/language problems. 368 Jan 52
302 mentally retarded (MR) adults, representative of the total Danish MR population, were examined with regard to behavioural symptoms and
psychiatric disorder
. Deviant behaviour was found in 123 (41%) and was correlated to origin and degree of retardation, epilepsy and place of living. The distribution of the symptoms strongly indicates that organic brain damage is the major etiological cause. By grouping behavioural symptoms on three axes: A: social withdrawal (27%), B: abnormal bodily movements and sensory stimulation (22%) and C: conduct behaviour (17%), different patterns of abnormal behaviour were demonstrated. Behavioural symptoms occurred in 74 (87%) of 85 persons given present state psychiatric diagnoses. Behavioural symptoms are prominent in the group of autistic psychosis (
childhood autism
), which is classified by the triad of 1)
autism
, 2) abnormal language, and 3) stereotypic behaviour. This diagnosis was established in 23 (7.6%), and differences in psychopathology are basically determined by degree of intellectual resources, with the subgroup of
Kanner
's early
childhood autism
constituting the upper level.
...
PMID:Behavioural symptoms and autistic psychosis in the mentally retarded adult. 372 69
The syndrome of
autism
has been documented as occurring in association with a wide variety of genetic conditions. Autistic patients with a coexistent genetic condition, however, are not behaviorally or developmentally distinct from autistic patients for whom there is no known etiology or associated organic condition. This report reviews the literature linking autistic behavior with genetic conditions. Genetic, neurodevelopmental, and neuropathological findings in three genetic conditions which frequently give rise to
autism
are presented in detail. On the basis of this review, two hypotheses are supported:
autism
is a behaviorally defined phenotype which arises from diverse causes of central nervous system (CNS) damage, and the autistic phenotype represents only one point along a continuum of
psychological dysfunction
resulting from CNS damage. Current theories of genetic influences on brain development are reviewed, with emphasis on the relationships among qualitative, quantitative, and temporal abnormalities of CNS maturation and behavioral dysfunction. A hypothesis of abnormal brain development resulting from dysfunctional myelination is proposed as a potential etiologic factor in
autism
.
...
PMID:Autism and genetic disorders. 381 72
The prevalence of psychotropic and nonpsychotropic drug prescriptions in institutions and community residential facilities in 1978-79 was assessed. The data were gathered as an incidental part of a comprehensive national interview study of the characteristics of residential facilities and their residents. The study included 2271 retarded individuals in 236 residential facilities in the US. Facilities were selected through a 2-stage probability sample design in such a way that the probability of a facility's selection was proportionate to its size (number of residents) and so that the distribution of sample facilities across census regions and size classes was in close agreement with the distribution of facilities nationally. Interviews at 75 institutions and 161 private facilities were conducted between September 1978 and April 1979. Demographic information about individual residents, including date of birth, date of admission, previous type of residential placement, age, height, weight, diagnosed degree of retardation, and diagnosis of epilepsy,
autism
, or
mental illness
, was obtained from each resident's records. The staff person most familiar with each resident was then identified and interviewed about the resident. Care persons were asked whether and for what purpose drugs were prescribed for each resident. 75.8% of institutionalized residents and 54.3% of community facility residents were reported to be receiving at least 1 type of regularly prescribed medication. Percentages reported for specific drugs should be considered minimums, because drug names were not always elicited if the drug's purpose was known. Drugs not named, but reported to be prescribed for a chronic health condition, epilepsy, a psychiatric problem, for sleeping, or for birth control, were listed with "other" within tentative categories. Multiple regression was used to examine the relationships among drug use and several resident and facility characteristics. The institutionalized and community-based samples were combined for these analyses. Drugs reported to be prescribed for chronic health problems most frequently were used by older, nonambulatory residents who had health problems. Use of antiepilepsy drugs was most closely associated with a history of seizures. Only 1.3% of community facility residents and 1.6% of institutionalized residents whose records did not document epilepsy were reported to be receiving antiepilepsy drugs. Psychotropic drugs most often were prescribed for residents with behavior problems or for those with a recorded mention of
mental illness
or
autism
. Older, heavier, and more severely retarded residents also were more likely to receive psychotropic drugs. Contraceptive drugs were predicted by age, sex, ability, and minority status. Younger and less retarded women were more likely to receive birth control methods, as were minorities.
...
PMID:A national study of prescribed drugs in institutions and community residential facilities for mentally retarded people. 400 Dec 92
302 mentally retarded adults, sampled by epidemiological criteria, were examined with regard to handicaps, behaviour, skills and psychopathology by use of the MRC HBS-schedule and a list of psychiatric items. Based on research criteria, a computerized psychiatric diagnosis was made on a hierarchial scale. A
psychiatric disorder
was diagnosed in 85 (27.1%), which is a smaller prevalence rate than found in other studies. Next to behaviour disorder (10.9%), psychosis of uncertain type (5%) was the most common disorder. Dementia and early
childhood autism
were found equally often (3.6% each). Neurosis was seldom (2%), while schizophrenia (1.3%) and affective disorder (1.7%) occurred at about the same rates as found in similar investigations. No cases of alcohol or drug abuse were found.
...
PMID:The prevalence of psychiatric morbidity in mentally retarded adults. 408 61
Two cases diagnosed as suffering from
infantile autism
are described. Underlying epileptogenic changes in the EEG were not disclosed until relatively late in the course of the
psychiatric disorder
. Anticonvulsive pharmacological treatment led to complete disappearance of psychotic symptoms and to simultaneous disappearance of the pathological EEG changes. Alternative mechanisms are proposed to account for the clinical phenomena.
...
PMID:Epilepsy presenting as infantile autism? Two case studies. 619 77
This paper is elaborated in the same order of those who developpe the idea that, Psychosis is pleaded as an alibi of a totalitarian reality (Psychosis alibi). So it may allow to disengage the evolution of the Psychiatry outside of the anti-psychiatry ideologies. The main subject of this work, is to analyse the gap between the Reality which includes the psychosis as a part of herself (Psychosis as disease). On the second hand the Reality of the psychosis from the psycho-pathologic point of view (delirium, hallucinations,
autism
, etc...). Considering the importance of the formal grammatical functions in the linguistic matter to site the reference to the reality according to the rules of the communication and the oral expression; so we propose a grammatical analysis. Two parts are distinguishable in this work. The first part concerns a review of languages proposed in different psychiatric "theorization" established previously about
mental disorder
. So it could be considered that the psychosis is the one who "speaks" the psychiatry. The second part concerns an abstract of the "semiotiques" studies by which we can tackle the psychosis with a scientific language: The Psychiatric "speaking" the psychosis not the opposite. This way of analyse allows to realize the modifications in the part of both protagonists in the game. By the same way, it authorizes to introduce the psychiatry from the axiomatic point of view, allowing a self-contained definition as a branch of the medicine, and disengaging his subject: The psychosis; as a syntactic subject.
...
PMID:[Psychosis and grammatical reality. Preliminary to an axiomatic system]. 730 83
In order to evaluate the occurrence of
psychiatric disorder
following infantile spasms, a long-term follow-up study (between three and 19 years) was made of 192 children in Finland.
Psychiatric disorders
were found in 53 of the children. 24 had
infantile autism
(transient in 14 cases), 16 of whom were also hyperkinetic, as were an additional 29 cases from the whole group. Considerable muscular hypotonia was frequently combined with
infantile autism
, but both tended to decrease with age. Autistic children often had psychomotor epilepsy and temporal lobe abnormalities, which suggests that organic lesions with a specific localization may be a pathophysiological basis for
autism
. In addition, the hyperkinetic children had more focal temporal abnormalities in their EEGs than did the children without psychiatric disorders.
...
PMID:Psychiatric disorders in children with earlier infantile spasms. 731 42
An effort was made to formalize the critical clinical, demographic and historical features of schizophrenia through the development of a reliable assessment questionnaire. The criterion diagnosis was established via traditional hospital procedures and was substantiated by psychometric measures. Raters with comparable diagnostic experience were familiarized with each of the clinical, demographic and historical features before evaluating the presence or absence in a sample of both psychiatric in-patients and out-patients. A structured, standardized interview was used to reduce inconsistency and oversight due to variability in interviewing techniques and coverage of psychopathology. Using the coefficients of the discriminative functions of five major symptoms (loose associations,
autism
, loss of ego boundaries, emotional blunting, delusions) and two demographic and historical features (family history of
mental illness
, poor social relations) correctly classified 98 per cent of the total sample of 253 patients. A subsequent investigation demonstrated the utility and generalizability of the proposed system. The assets and liabilities of using such an approach are discussed.
...
PMID:Using discriminant function analysis with clinical, demographic and historical variables to diagnose schizophrenia. 743 57
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