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Query: UMLS:C0004352 (
autism
)
32,579
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although Asperger syndrome (AS) has been included in the ICD-10 as a distinct category within the pervasive developmental disorders, it is still unclear to what extent it differs from normal-intelligence
autism
(high-functioning
autism
;
HFA
). Persons with AS are said to be particularly clumsy. To test the hypothesis that clumsiness can reliably distinguish AS from
autism
, the present authors compared 11 patients with AS (ICD-10; 10 males; mean age, 13.6 years; mean IQ, 98) with nine patients with
HFA
(ICD-10/DSM-III-R; eight males; mean age, 12.9 years; mean IQ, 84). Clumsiness was assessed by the Bruininks-Oseretsky test. Both groups showed problems with coordination and the distribution of standard scores was virtually identical. This suggests that motor clumsiness, as measured by tests of coordination, may not reliably distinguish AS from
HFA
. However, qualitative differences may occur between the two groups in the manner in which movements are performed. Further research with larger samples may elicit differences into the pattern of motor deficits that occur in
autism
and AS.
...
PMID:Is clumsiness a marker for Asperger syndrome? 784 89
Adolescents with Asperger syndrome (AS: without delay in speech development, diagnosed according to ICD-10 clinical criteria) were compared with a group with high-functioning
autism
(
HFA
: all with delayed speech development), and a group with conduct disorder (CD). Family and genetic studies suggest that Asperger syndrome and
autism
form part of the same spectrum, whereas the social impairments in conduct disorder are assumed to have different origins. The aims were to explore the relationships between early speech development and other aspects of functioning in
autistic disorders
, and to compare autistic and nonautistic social impairments. Early and current behaviour and IQ profiles were investigated. The CD group were clearly different from both the AS and
HFA
groups. The AS group tended to have less severe early behavioural abnormalities than the
HFA
group, and were unlikely to have speech abnormalities, but other communicative, social, and restricted/ stereotyped behavioural difficulties were largely of a similar pattern to the abnormalities in the
HFA
group. Eighty per cent of the AS group met criteria for
autism
on the diagnostic algorithm associated with the
Autism
Diagnostic Interview-Revised. By adolescence, the AS group were reported to be as abnormal as the
HFA
group but in structured 1:1 interaction their conversation was better. IQ profile in the AS group showed relative strength on verbal measures, unlike the
HFA
group, but relatively good performance on the Block Design subtest of the WISC/WAIS was a feature of both the AS and
HFA
groups. The results indicate closely similar behavioural manifestations may arise by adolescence despite differences in speech development. Follow-up studies and further family investigations will be required to clarify the origins of these and other patterns of autistic development.
...
PMID:Development and current functioning in adolescents with Asperger syndrome: a comparative study. 1128 Apr 19
Efforts to examine the structural neuroanatomy of
autism
by using traditional methods of imaging analysis have led to variable findings, often based on methodological differences in image acquisition and analysis. A voxel-based computational method of whole-brain anatomy allows examination of small patterns of tissue differences between groups. High-resolution structural magnetic resonance images were acquired for nine males with high-functioning
autism
(
HFA
; mean age 14y [SD3y 4mo]), 11 with Asperger syndrome (ASP; mean age 13y 6mo [SD2y 5mo]), and 13 comparison (COM) participants (mean age 13y 7mo [SD 3y 1mo]). Using statistical parametric mapping, we examined contrasts of gray matter differences between the groups. Males with
HFA
and ASP had a pattern of decreased gray matter density in the ventromedial regions of the temporal cortex in comparison with males from an age-matched comparison group. Examining contrasts revealed that the COM group had increased gray matter density compared with the ASP or combined
HFA
and ASP group in the right inferior temporal gyrus, entorhinal cortex, and rostral fusiform gyrus. The ASP group had less gray matter density in the body of the cingulate gyrus in comparison with either the COM or
HFA
group. The findings of decreased gray matter density in ventromedial aspects of the temporal cortex in individuals with
HFA
and ASP lends support to theories suggesting an involvement of these areas in the pathophysiology of
autism
, particularly in the integration of visual stimuli and affective information.
...
PMID:Voxel-based morphometry elucidates structural neuroanatomy of high-functioning autism and Asperger syndrome. 1554 Jun 37
This paper reports the findings of a 20-week social adjustment enhancement curriculum for boys aged 8-12. The curriculum was designed to address three areas hypothesized to be deficient in persons with
HFA
, AS, and PDDNOS: emotion recognition and understanding; theory of mind; and executive functions/real life type problem solving. Parents attended a semi-structured concurrent psychoeducational training meeting during children's sessions. Statistically significant improvements in facial expression recognition, and problem solving were reported for intervention group children compared to waiting list control group children. For the intervention group (the only group for whom data were available), older and less cognitively able boy's scores on a depression inventory decreased significantly more than younger children's. Mother's depression scores tended to decrease and there were significant reductions in child problem behaviors reported. Results are discussed in the context of individual differences in participant cognitive levels and profiles, symptom severity, and affect-related variables.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2004 Dec
PMID:A social adjustment enhancement intervention for high functioning autism, Asperger's syndrome, and pervasive developmental disorder NOS. 1567 85
Asperger syndrome (AS) is a childhood-onset disorder often described as a mild variant of
autism
. Although classified as a distinct disorder in the DSM-IV, its overlap with
autism
continues to be a matter of ongoing debate. While the family genetic origins of
autism
are well established, few studies have investigated this topic in AS using current operational criteria. In this report, we examined the family psychiatric history of 58 subjects with AS diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria (48 males; mean age 13.34; mean full scale IQ 104.87). All subjects had a history of mild autistic social deficits; focused special interests; normal level of intelligence; and an odd and often pedantic manner of speaking. None had a previous diagnosis of
autism
. Of the 58 subjects with Asperger syndrome, three had first degree relatives with AS; nine (15%) had a family history of schizophrenia; and 35 (60%) had a family history of depression. Of the 64 siblings, four had a diagnosis of AS and none of
autism
. Compared with a group of 39 subjects with normal intelligence
autism
(high functioning
autism
,
HFA
; 33 males; mean age 15.34; mean full scale IQ 85.89) subjects with AS were more likely to have relatives with depression; schizophrenia; and the broader autistic phenotype. Possible reasons for and implications of these findings are discussed.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2005 Apr
PMID:A family history study of Asperger syndrome. 1590 4
The
Autism
Spectrum Quotient (AQ) has been developed to measure the degree to which an adult with normal intelligence has autistic traits. In this paper it is evaluated for its potential as a screening questionnaire in clinical practice on one hundred consecutive referrals to a diagnostic clinic for adults suspected of having Asperger Syndrome or high functioning
autism
(AS/
HFA
). The results indicate that it has good discriminative validity and good screening properties at a threshold score of 26. The implications of these results are discussed.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2005 Jun
PMID:Screening adults for Asperger Syndrome using the AQ: a preliminary study of its diagnostic validity in clinical practice. 1611 74
Autism
and Asperger's disorder (AD) are neurodevelopmental conditions that affect cognitive and social-communicative function. Using a movement-related potential (MRP) paradigm, we investigated the clinical and neurobiological issue of 'disorder separateness' versus 'disorder variance' in
autism
and AD. This paradigm has been used to assess basal ganglia/supplementary motor functioning in Parkinson's disease. Three groups (high functioning
autism
[
HFA
]: 16 males, 1 female; mean age 12y 5mo [SD 4y 4mo]; AD: 11 males, 2 females; mean age 13y 5mo [SD 3y 8mo]; comparison group: 13 males, 8 females; mean age 13y 10mo [SD 3y 11mo]) completed a cued motor task during electroencephalogram recording of MRPs. The
HFA
group showed reduced peak amplitude at Cz, indicating less activity over the supplementary motor area during movement preparation. Although an overall significant between-group effect was found for early slope and peak amplitude, sub-analysis revealed that the group with AD did not differ significantly from either group. However, it is suggested that
autism
and AD may be dissociated on the basis of brain-behaviour correlations of IQ with specific neurobiological measures. The overlap between MRP traces for
autism
and Parkinson's disease suggests that the neurobiological wiring of motor functioning in
autism
may bypass the supplementary motor area/primary motor cortex pathway.
...
PMID:Movement-related potentials in high-functioning autism and Asperger's disorder. 1654 14
The AQ (
Autism
-Spectrum Quotient) is a self-administered instrument for measuring the degree to which an adult with normal intelligence has the traits associated with the autistic spectrum. The AQ was administered in Japan to test whether the UK results would generalize to a very different culture. Three groups of subjects, adults with AS or
HFA
(n = 57), adult controls (n = 194), and University students (n = 1050) were assessed. The adults with AS/
HFA
had a mean AQ score which was significantly higher than both the controls and the University students. Among the controls, males scored significantly higher than females. The similarity of results in both the general population and the clinical group across the two cultures was remarkable.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2006 Feb
PMID:The Autism-Spectrum Quotient (AQ) in Japan: A cross-cultural comparison. 1658 57
In order to explain the cognitive and cerebral mechanisms responsible for the visuospatial peak in
autism
, and to document its specificity to this condition, a group of eight high-functioning individuals with
autism
and a visuospatial peak (HFA-P) performed a modified block-design task (BDT; subtest from Wechsler scales) at various levels of perceptual cohesiveness, as well as tasks tapping visuomotor speed, global perception, visual memory, visual search and speed of visual encoding. Their performance was compared with that of 8 autistics without a visuospatial peak (HFA-NP), 10 typically developing individuals (TD) and 8 gifted comparison participants with a visuospatial peak (TD-P). Both
HFA
-P and
HFA
-NP groups presented with diminished detrimental influence of increasing perceptual coherence compared with their BDT-matched comparison groups. Neither autistic group displayed a deficit in construction of global representations. The
HFA
-P group showed no differences in performance level or profile in comparison with the gifted BDT-matched [i.e. higher full-scale IQ (FSIQ)] group, apart from locally oriented perception. Diminished detrimental influence of perceptual coherence on BDT performance is both sensitive and specific to
autism
, and superior low-level processing interacts with locally oriented bias to produce outstanding BDT performance in a subgroup of autistic individuals. Locally oriented processing, enhanced performance in multiple tasks relying on detection of simple visual material and enhanced discrimination of first-order gratings converge towards an enhanced functioning and role of the primary visual cortex (V1) in
autism
. In contrast, superior or typical performance of autistics in tasks requiring global processing is inconsistent with the global-deficit-driven Weak Central Coherence hypothesis and its neurobiological magnocellular deficit counterpart.
...
PMID:Cognitive mechanisms, specificity and neural underpinnings of visuospatial peaks in autism. 1659 52
Little effort has been made to characterize the developmental anatomic phenotype of
autism
; although there is evidence of an increased head circumference and brain size, few other physical characteristics have been studied. The head circumference, body length/height, and weight measurements of infants, who were later diagnosed with high-functioning
autism
(
HFA
, n = 16) and Asperger disorder (AsD, n = 12), were extracted from health records over the first 3 years of life and compared to the measurements of a matched normal control group (n = 19). Using linear mixed-effects models, no differences were found in the average growth rate for head circumference, stature, or weight between the children with
HFA
and AsD. However, a significantly higher growth rate in body length/height and weight was found for the combined group of children with
HFA
and AsD compared to the normal control group. A trend toward higher growth rate in head circumference was also found among the former group. The results indicate that growth dysregulation in
autism
is not specific to the brain but also involves growth in stature.
...
PMID:Growth in stature and head circumference in high-functioning autism and Asperger disorder during the first 3 years of life. 1660 60
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