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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Of 135 autistic and/or mentally retarded youngsters, 30 with pervasive developmental disorders and 2 with nonautistic
mental retardation
showed school refusal according to its modified definition. School refusal was significantly more frequent in other PDDs than in nonautistic
mental retardation
. The intellectual level was significantly higher in
PDD
children with school refusal than those without it. A certain level of mental development and obsessive tendency appear necessary for
PDD
children to develop school refusal. In order to treat school refusal in
PDD
, it is important to make school a pleasant place to go and to encourage the child to attend.
...
PMID:School refusal in pervasive developmental disorders. 203 46
Assessed differences in sex ratio, severity of associated
mental retardation
, and various metrics of severity of autism in autistic,
PDD
-NOS, and developmentally disordered (non-PDD) cases. Males with autism were more frequent than females, particular at higher IQ levels. The three clinical groups differed, in expected ways, in the various measures of severity of autism with the
PDD
-NOS cases being intermediate between the strictly diagnosed autistic group and the non-
PDD
developmental disordered group. Sex differences were primarily confined to IQ; sex differences in other metrics of severity of autism were not prominent. Implications for future research are discussed.
...
PMID:Sex differences in pervasive developmental disorders. 810 1
Variations of season of birth among autistic individuals were studied. The replicability of previously reported increases in birth rates in the months of March and August were examined in groups of individuals with autism or
mental retardation
(the comparison group). The sample was obtained from the Yale Child Study Center Developmental Disabilities Clinic and from the DSM-IV Autism/
PDD
field trial. Data were analyzed by applying the Jonckheere test of ordinal trend and the chi-square test, with Yates correction factor. With respect to March and August births, and with calculations based on the beginning and middle of the month, no significant seasonal effect was observed. Samples were subcategorized into verbal and mute groups, and again results failed to support the seasonality hypothesis.
...
PMID:Season of birth in autism: a fiction revisited. 1058 85
Although the interpretation of studies of face recognition in older children, adolescents, and adults with autism is complicated by the fact that participating samples and adopted methodologies vary significantly, there is nevertheless strong evidence indicating processing peculiarities even when task performance is not deficient. Much less is known about face recognition abilities in younger children with autism. This study employed a well-normed task of face recognition to measure this ability in 102 young children with autism, pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified (PDDNOS), and non-
PDD
disorders (
mental retardation
and language disorders) matched on chronological age and nonverbal mental age, and in a subsample of 51 children divided equally in the same three groups matched on chronological age and verbal mental age. There were pronounced deficits of face recognition in the autistic group relative to the other nonverbally matched and verbally matched groups. Performance on two comparison tasks did not reveal significant differences when verbal ability was adequately controlled. We concluded that young children with autism have face recognition deficits that cannot be attributed to overall cognitive abilities or task demands. In contrast to controls, there was a lower correlation between performance on face recognition and nonverbal intelligence, suggesting that in autism face recognition is less correlated with general cognitive capacity. Contrary to our expectation, children with PDDNOS did not show face recognition deficits.
...
PMID:A normed study of face recognition in autism and related disorders. 1063 62
A review is presented of the investigations carried out concerning the adaptive behavior of persons with the dual disability of
mental retardation
and autism/
PDD
. A close correspondence is found between the results obtained by means of a Dutch set of scales, the SRZ, SGZ, and SMZ, and those obtained by means of the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales. Compared with matched nonautistic persons, the performance of dually disabled persons is found to be particularly poor in the domain Social Skills/Socialization and somewhat less poor in the domain Communication. Performance of the two categories does not differ in the domains Self Help/Daily Living Skills and Gross Motor Skills/Motor Skills. As a net result, persons of the dually disabled category are found to obtain comparatively low total scores for social competency, the SRZ-Total/Adaptive Behavior Composite. In addition, autistic mentally retarded persons are found to display more maladaptive behavior. For comparative studies in the
mental retardation
field the use of level of Self Help/Daily Living Skills and, to a lesser extent, level of Gross Motor Skills/Motor Skills are recommended as suitable matching variables.
...
PMID:Review of adaptive behavior studies in mentally retarded persons with autism/pervasive developmental disorder. 1081 19
This study on children with a Pervasive Developmental Disorder (
PDD
; N = 32), children with developmental language disorder (N = 22), and normally developing children (N = 28) sought to answer questions concerning attachment and autistic behaviour. We could replicate the finding that children with a
PDD
are able to develop secure attachment relationships to their primary caregiver. Children with
PDD
who had an insecure attachment showed fewer social initiatives and responses than children with
PDD
who had a secure attachment, even when the insecurely and securely attached
PDD
children were matched on chronological and mental age. Children with both a
PDD
and
mental retardation
were more often classified as disorganised. Three findings suggested that a disorganised attachment does not merely reflect the presence of "autistic" behaviour: (1) children with
PDD
did not reveal higher rates of a disorganised attachment than matched comparison children; (2) having a
PDD
diagnosis and having a disorganised attachment were found to be associated with opposite effects on an ethological measure of level of behavioural organisation; and (3) a disorganised attachment but not a
PDD
diagnosis was associated with an increase in heart rate during parting with the caregiver and a decrease in heart rate during reunion.
...
PMID:Insecure and disorganised attachment in children with a pervasive developmental disorder: relationship with social interaction and heart rate. 1103 88
This study examined the association between adaptive behavior and general cognitive level in individuals with autism or
PDD
-NOS with and without comorbid
mental retardation
. Data from the screening version of the Vineland Adaptive Scales and the Wechsler Intelligence Scales were analysed in a sample of 67 subjects. While in the higher functioning individuals (IQ > 70, n = 34) IQ and adaptive behavior level differed significantly, performances were fairly comparable in subjects showing lower cognitive functioning (IQ < 70, n = 33). Regression models revealed a higher correlation between IQ and single adaptive behavior domains in the non-mentally retarded participants, with the domain Communication reaching the highest predictive power of the single adaptive behavior areas. Findings indicate, the relationship between adaptive and cognitive function in autistic disorders is mediated by the presence of a qualitative reduction of intelligence. Methodological limitations of the study are discussed.
...
PMID:The relation between general cognitive level and adaptive behavior domains in individuals with autism with and without co-morbid mental retardation. 1246 53
The performance of two screening instruments for Pervasive Developmental Disorders was studied in the total population of participants with
mental retardation
between 4 and 18 years (n = 1059) in Friesland, a northern province of the Netherlands. Parents completed the Autism Behavior Checklist (ABC), staff completed the Scale of Pervasive Developmental Disorder in Mentally Retarded Persons (PDD-MRS). The screening instruments were related to the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised and Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-Generic for 184 participants. The agreement between ABC and
PDD
-MRS was fair (kappa = .24). The ABC had a better criterion-related validity compared with the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised, and the
PDD
-MRS compared to the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-Generic. However, related to the clinical classification, both instruments performed equally well. Concluding, the ABC and
PDD
-MRS partially identify the same cases related to external criteria. In addition, each instrument has its own contribution. Both instruments are valuable in detecting children who are at high risk for
PDD
.
...
PMID:Measuring pervasive developmental disorders in children and adolescents with mental retardation: a comparison of two screening instruments used in a study of the total mentally retarded population from a designated area. 1471 29
Deletions of the sub-telomeric region of chromosome 22 have been associated with
mental retardation
, developmental delay, and autistic behaviors. This study investigated sub-telomeric anomalies of chromosome 22 using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) probes in 82 subjects diagnosed with autism and atypical autism. No microdeletions were detected in this group. Similar FISH analyses were undertaken on two children with developmental delay, who were ascertained to be ring 22 during routine cytogenetic investigations. One subject was shown to have a microdeletion in the sub-telomeric region tested. Both children met the social and communication cut off for autism on the ADI and but did not meet the cut off for restrictive and repetitive behaviors. Only one of the two children met the criteria for
PDD
on the ADOS.
...
PMID:An investigation into sub-telomeric deletions of chromosome 22 and pervasive developmental disorders. 1475 53
We report heterozygous mutations in the genes encoding either type I or type II transforming growth factor beta receptor in ten families with a newly described human phenotype that includes widespread perturbations in cardiovascular, craniofacial, neurocognitive and skeletal development. Despite evidence that receptors derived from selected mutated alleles cannot support
TGFbeta
signal propagation, cells derived from individuals heterozygous with respect to these mutations did not show altered kinetics of the acute phase response to administered ligand. Furthermore, tissues derived from affected individuals showed increased expression of both collagen and connective tissue growth factor, as well as nuclear enrichment of phosphorylated Smad2, indicative of increased
TGFbeta
signaling. These data definitively implicate perturbation of
TGFbeta
signaling in many common human phenotypes, including craniosynostosis, cleft palate, arterial aneurysms, congenital heart disease and
mental retardation
, and suggest that comprehensive mechanistic insight will require consideration of both primary and compensatory events.
...
PMID:A syndrome of altered cardiovascular, craniofacial, neurocognitive and skeletal development caused by mutations in TGFBR1 or TGFBR2. 1573 57
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