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Query: UMLS:C0004352 (
autism
)
32,579
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 2002, the National Institutes of Health sponsored a meeting concerning methodological challenges of research in psychosocial interventions in Autism Spectrum Disorders. This paper provides a summary of the presentations and the discussions that occurred during this meeting. Recommendations to federal and private agencies included the need for randomized clinical trials of comprehensive interventions for
autism
as the highest, but not the sole priority. Ongoing working groups were proposed to address psychosocial interventions with a focus on relevant statistics, standardized documentation and methods of diagnosis, development of outcome measures, establishment of standards in research; and the need for innovative treatment designs, including application of designs from other research areas to the study of interventions in
ASD
.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2005 Dec
PMID:Challenges in evaluating psychosocial interventions for Autistic Spectrum Disorders. 1649 6
This article describes the development of a screening instrument for young children. Screening items were tested first in a non-selected population of children aged 8-20 months (n = 478). Then, parents of children with clinically diagnosed
ASD
(n = 153, average age 87 months) or ADHD (n = 76, average age 112 months) were asked to score the items retrospectively for when their child was 14 months old. A 14-item screening instrument, Early Screening of Autistic Traits (ESAT) which had maximal sensitivity and specificity for
ASD
was developed. The sensitivity of the ESAT was checked in an independent sample of 34 children aged 16-48 months clinically diagnosed with
ASD
. A 4-item version appears to be a promising prescreening instrument.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2006 Aug
PMID:Screening for autistic spectrum in children aged 14 to 15 months. I: the development of the Early Screening of Autistic Traits Questionnaire (ESAT). 1661 90
Many researchers have suggested that temperament information could be useful for understanding the behavioral variability within the
autism
spectrum. The purpose of this brief report is to examine temperament profiles of 110 children with
ASD
(ages 3-8 years, 61 with
Autistic Disorder
, 42 with PDD-NOS; and 7 with Asperger Disorder) via a commonly used parent report measure of child temperament. Internal consistency of temperament dimensions, test-retest reliability, descriptions of means and standard deviations are examined, relative to previously published norms. Internal consistency of the dimensions and test-retest reliability were comparable to published norms; however, children with
autism
were rated as presenting with more extreme scores than typically-developing children on several dimensions. Limitations and implications for future work are discussed.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2006 Jul
PMID:Using Carey Temperament Scales to assess behavioral style in children with autism spectrum disorders. 1662 81
This study examined whether major congenital structural anomalies identified in infancy occurred more frequently in children later diagnosed with
autism
spectrum disorders (
ASD
; n=417; 341 males, 76 females) than in comparison children (n=2,067; 1,681 males, 386 females). Participants were sampled from infants born at Kaiser Permanente Northern California facilities between 1995 and 1999 who remained health plan members for at least 2 years (n=88,163). Comparison children were frequency-matched to children with
ASD
according to sex, birth year, and birth hospital. Congenital anomalies were diagnosed in 10.8% of children with
ASD
and 6.2% of comparison children (crude odds ratio [ORc] 1.8, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.3-2.6). This association remained significant after adjustment for key maternal and infant covariates (adjusted OR [ORa] 1.7, 95% CI 1.1-2.4). Almost all organ-system anomaly categories were more prevalent in children with
ASD
, however only gastrointestinal anomalies were significantly associated with
ASD
in adjusted analyses (1.9 vs 0.4%, ORa 5.1, 95% CI 1.8-14.1).
...
PMID:Congenital anomalies associated with autism spectrum disorders. 1670 Sep 44
Stress proliferation (the tendency of stressors to engender additional stressors in other life domains) is explored in a sample of 68 parents of children identified with
ASD
. Regression analyses showed that parent depression was predicted by both child symptom severity and by stress proliferation and that stress proliferation partially mediated the effect of child symptom severity on parent depression. In addition, informal social support was found to reduce levels of parent stress proliferation and parent depression; however, contrary to the stress buffering hypothesis, the ameliorative effect of support on stress proliferation was shown to be greatest when reported child symptomatology was less (rather than more) severe. Study implications for future research and practice are discussed.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2006 Jul
PMID:The impact of child symptom severity on depressed mood among parents of children with ASD: the mediating role of stress proliferation. 1683 10
Little is known about the use of medical services by children who have
autism
(
ASD
). Provide nationally representative data for health service utilization and expenditures of children with
ASD
. Cross-sectional survey using the Medical Expenditure Panel (MEPS), and National (Hospital) Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys (N(H)AMCS). A total of 80 children with
ASD
were identified from N(H)AMCS (weighted sample size (wss) 186,281), and 31 (wss 340,158) from MEPS. They had more outpatient visits, physician visits, and medications prescribed than children in general. They spent more time during physician visits than other children. Annual expenses for children with
autism
spectrum disorder (6,132 dollars) were more than for other children (860 dollars). Children with
ASD
have a substantial burden of medical illness.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2006 Oct
PMID:Health care utilization and expenditures for children with autism: data from U.S. national samples. 1685 79
Previous studies suggest that complementary and alternative medical (CAM) therapy use in children with chronic illnesses is higher than in children in the general population. In this study, we investigated patterns of CAM therapy use in children diagnosed with
autism
spectrum disorders (
ASD
, n = 50) as compared to a control population of children with no
ASD
(n = 50). Over half of the parents in the
ASD
group reported using, or had used at least one CAM therapy for their child (52%) as compared to 28% of the control group (P = 0.024). Seventy percent of therapies used in the
ASD
group were biologically based therapies comprised of special diets or supplements, and parents felt that 75% of the therapies used were beneficial.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2006 Oct
PMID:Patterns of complementary and alternative medical therapy use in children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders. 1689 95
This study investigated reading skills in 41 children with
autism
spectrum disorder. Four components of reading skill were assessed: word recognition, nonword decoding, text reading accuracy and text comprehension. Overall, levels of word and nonword reading and text reading accuracy fell within average range although reading comprehension was impaired. However, there was considerable variability across the sample with performance on most tests ranging from floor to ceiling levels. Some children read accurately but showed very poor comprehension, consistent with a hyperlexia reading profile; some children were poor at reading words and nonwords whereas others were unable to decode nonwords, despite a reasonable level of word reading skill. These findings demonstrate the heterogeneous nature of reading skills in children with
ASD
.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2006 Oct
PMID:Patterns of reading ability in children with autism spectrum disorder. 1689 96
This study used a concurrent correlational design to examine associations between three types of motor imitation with objects and three proposed correlates in 32 two- and three-year-old children diagnosed with
ASD
. Attention-following and fine motor ability were significant, unique correlates of imitation in an observational learning context. Attention-following was a significant correlate of imitation in a direct elicitation context. Social reciprocity was a significant correlate of imitation in an interactive play context. These associations were observed after controlling for general developmental level. Results support previous findings that motor imitation may not reflect a unitary construct for children with
ASD
and that different skills may underlie the performance of different types of motor imitation. Implications for interventions targeting motor imitation are discussed.
J
Autism
Dev Disord 2007 Mar
PMID:Developmental correlates of different types of motor imitation in young children with autism spectrum disorders. 1690 Apr 4
Epilepsy is quite common in
autism
spectrum disorders, and it is increasingly recognized as an additional clinical problem that must be dealt with. The rate of comorbidity varies, depending upon the age and type of disorder, and currently the conservative estimate of comorbidity cases is 20-25% of the whole spectrum. Major risk factors for seizure occurrence are mental retardation and additional neurological disorders, as well as some specific associated medical conditions.
Autism
with regression has been reported in one-third of children with previously normal or nearly normal development. In an unknown proportion of these subjects, epileptic disorders are concomitant, leading to so-called autistic epileptiform regression. Furthermore, epileptiform abnormalities without seizures are frequent in this population and their role in the development of the nuclear disturbances of
autism
is controversial. The therapeutic approaches to epilepsy in
autism
are conventional treatments, yet when seizures are not evident, there is still controversy. Anticonvulsant medications could also potentially interfere with mood and behavioral disturbances frequently observed in
ASD
. The current understanding of the association between epilepsy and
autism
is still limited, but from a clinical point of view this association should not be overlooked, and it should be routinely investigated.
...
PMID:Epilepsy in autism spectrum disorders. 1693 56
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