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New Ways to Diagnose Autism Earlier

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From: AutismRecoveryNetwork [mailto:AutismRecoveryNetwork ] On Behalf Of Kim HammonsSent: Wednesday, July 09, 2008 6:55 PMTo: IPUT4-TampaAutism ; IPUT4UniversalEducationandAdvocacy ; partners-n-policymaking2006 ; AutismRecoveryNetwork ; Autism-Florida Subject: [AutismRecoveryNetwork] New Ways to Diagnose Autism Earlier

New Ways to Diagnose Autism EarlierThe accompanying video is at http://link. brightcove. com/services/ link/bcpid861955 73/bclid86272812 /bctid1653693032Detection at Younger Ages Leads to Greater Gains in Language And IQ; Predicting Risk With Eye-Movement SensorsBy JEREMY SINGER-VINEJuly 8, 2008; Page D1With the number of autistic children growing, researchers are targeting new technologies to help detect the disorder at ever-younger ages in hopes of reversing some of autism's worst symptoms.A Yale University research video shows an infant undergoing an eye-tracking session as part of a study to identify behavior in very young children that could indicate a risk of developing autism.Most autistic children currently aren't diagnosed until they are about 4 years old, using conventional detection methods of observing behavior. Although specialists are able to identify the condition starting at about 30 months, most parents don't seek evaluations that early because they don't notice anything unusual about their children, or don't know what symptoms to look for. Now, scientists are using new techniques to study children as young as a few months old for signs of possible autism and to flag them for more extensive analysis.By identifying children early who may be at risk of developing autism, even without a definitive diagnosis, parents can consider initiating behavioral therapy, the most widely validated treatment for the condition. Studies of autistic children indicate that preschool-age kids receiving intensive treatment show greater gains in language and IQ scores than children whose treatment begins at older ages. Behavioral therapy includes such measures as encouraging children to look at people's faces, express emotions and curtail any repetitive tics. But diagnosis and therapy can be expensive, and insurance coverage for autism treatment is spotty, especially for early intervention.Researchers at Canada's McMaster University recently announced that they had developed a computerized test using eye-movement sensors that aims to predict the risk of autism in children as young as 9 months. The system, which administers five eye-tracking tests over 10 minutes, measures the direction and fixation of a child's eyes when confronted with computerized images, including human faces.AUTISM INFORMATION ON THE WEBStudies of very young children: . The Early Autism Study, McMaster University1. Yale University's Toddler Developmental Disabilities Clinic2. The Groden Center3. University of California, M.I.N.D. Institute4. The Kennedy Krieger Institute Center for Autism and Related Disorders (CARD)5Information on what parents should look for: . Learn the Signs. Act Early6. Autism Spectrum Disorders Fact Sheet7. First Signs8. First Words Project9Autism advocacy groups: . Autism Speaks10. Autistic Self-Advocacy Network11. National Autism Association12. Autism One13. Autism Society of America14Yale University's Toddler Developmental Disabilities Clinic is using similar eye-tracking technology to study patterns in gaze behavior in children ages 3 months to 3 years. And researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Media Lab are developing specialized software and an in-home recording device to analyze the habits of newborns in hopes of teasing out the most subtle signs of early autism."Children with autism in general have difficulty extracting affective information from faces, and also difficulty in recognizing faces," says Katarzyna Chawarska, director of the Yale clinic. By tracking eye movements, "we can begin to understand what interests them, how they examine objects they select for processing, and what motivates them intrinsically, " she says.The Yale clinic has been monitoring 17-month-old Caleb from birth. The fact that Caleb's older brother is autistic raises the odds that Caleb could also develop the disorder. After conducting more standard autism evaluations, Dr. Chawarska's team tracks Caleb's eyes as he looks at clips from "Sesame Street" and images of different faces. The perceptual patterns are encouraging, says Caleb's mother, , of Nawgatuck, Conn. "I see him watching the eyes and the mouth, I see him looking at the right-side-up face instead of the upside-down one. All of that gave me hope right away."But eye-tracking won't pick out all children with autism. That's because the disorder can manifest itself in a variety of ways at different ages, such as a child not responding when called or failing to exhibit normal body gestures. Some children also won't cooperate with the eye-tracking equipment.A GROWING DISORDERScientists have begun looking for signs of autism in children as young as a few months.. Diagnosis allows parents to initiate behavioral therapy, a common treatment that is more effective early in life.. The disorder is found in one out of every 150 children by the time they turn 8 years old.. The cost of diagnosis and therapy can be high, and insurance coverage is spotty.Autism specialists say the new technologies can provide useful clues in assessing the disorder, but a proper diagnosis requires human observation to consider a range of possible symptoms. "There is something about a clinician that adds to the predictive value," says E. Lord, director of the University of Michigan Autism and Communication Disorders Center. In the 1980s, Dr. Lord led the team that developed the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, which has become the standard assessment for autism.In traditional autism screening, clinicians observe children as they complete a set of human- and object-oriented tasks. Typical symptoms include aversion to normal social interaction, delays in language development, repetitive actions and sometimes self-abuse. There is no known medical cure.While most experts agree that there is a biological, and perhaps heritable, basis to autism, no available genetic or blood test can diagnose it. The high-tech researchers say that their tools are not meant to replace traditional diagnoses, but rather to complement them by screening children earlier and recommending probable cases for more-comprehensive assessments."By providing very intensive early intervention, we can significantly reduce the symptoms of autism," says Geraldine Dawson, chief science officer of advocacy group Autism Speaks. But "there is huge variation in how children respond to early intervention. "Autism spectrum disorders, including Asperger's syndrome, affect about 560,000 Americans under 21, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The disorder is found in one out of every 150 children by the time they are 8 years old, more than 10 times the reported rate in the 1980s, the CDC says. Autism experts are divided whether the rising number of cases is due to an actual higher occurrence, a loosening of diagnostic standards or greater screening frequency.Recently, some advocacy groups, such as the Autistic Self-Advocacy Network, have spoken out against a search for a cure -- arguing instead that others should accept autistic people as they are. "We are very supportive of early diagnosis and early education," says Ari Ne'eman, the group's president. "We shouldn't be trying to force normalcy on autistic children, but rather help children acquire skills, communication, and quality of life," he says.Annie Shic/Yale University A toddler participates in an experiment designed to study the preference for direct gaze, the common response in healthy children.Researchers say McMaster University's study to assess risk of autism was the first to find statistically significant differences in children at such a young age. The study (at earlyautismstudy. org15) conducted eye-tracking tests on 43 children. Of these, 13 children had siblings with autism, which increases the risk of having the disorder eightfold. The children were shown a series of images and were scored based on their responses; for instance, did a child spend more time looking at a person's eyes or mouth? The group of 13 children at elevated risk showed a significantly lower responsiveness score than did the other group with no known risk.The study was led by Mel D. Rutherford, director of early autism study at McMaster. She says the initial findings, presented at the International Meeting for Autism Research in London in May, only compare patterns between the two groups of children. But Dr. Rutherford expects that after refining the tools, her lab "will be able to construct a predictor score for each individual infant."Debbie Page says early action helped her son Gabe, who had a limited vocabulary and was diagnosed with autism at 30 months. Gabe spent six months last year participating in an early-intervention study at the Kennedy Krieger Institute Center for Autism and Related Disorders in the Page's home town of Baltimore.After 250 hours of intensive behavior therapy, which was free for the Pages because it was part of a study, Ms. Page says Gabe was speaking in three- and four-word sentences. He became more socially engaged and shed several tics, including humming nervously. This year, Gabe will enter a mainstream kindergarten, his mother says. "He came out like a songbird," she says.Researchers at MIT's Media Lab, who are developing software to analyze videos of autistic children, are collaborating with the Groden Center, a Providence, R.I., school and treatment center for autistic kids. The program, led by Deb Roy, director of the Cognitive Machines Group at the Media Lab, hopes to begin short trial runs in 10 homes by the end of the year. Dr. Roy says that by analyzing common behavioral patterns, he hopes to create a predictive tool for children at risk. He also says the video analysis can help families track progress of a child in therapy.While early intervention for autism can increase the financial burden on parents, it could potentially reduce costs in the long run if therapy succeeds in reducing an autistic child's symptoms. The average yearly health-care expenditures for a child with autism or a related disorder were nearly $6,000 in 2004, according to a study by Yale University researchers released last year. Specialized private schools for autistic children can cost about $60,000 a year.Ms. , in Connecticut, says she paid $5,000 to have her first child, Jules, diagnosed for autism, but Caleb's visits to the Yale study are free. She says insurance helped pay for speech and eating therapy and a Connecticut program for children with developmental disorders provides nearly-free specialist visits for additional treatment. But Ms. says her family can't afford to send the kids to a specialized private school for autistic children.Just eight states have passed bills mandating coverage by private insurers for autism and related disorders, including a Pennsylvania bill that awaits the governor's signature. (For a list of states, go to autismvotes. org16 and click the State Initiatives tab.) Currently, 27 additional states are working on autism initiatives, says Emken, vice president of government relations for Autism Speaks.Write to Singer-Vine at jeremy.singer- vinewsj (DOT) com17 URL for this article:http://online. wsj.com/article/ SB12154597809643 3273.htmlHyperlinks in this Article:(1) http://www.earlyaut ismstudy. org/ (2) http://www.childstu dycenter. yale.edu/ autism/index. html (3) http://www.grodence nter.org/ groden-center (4) http://www.ucdmc. ucdavis.edu/ MINDInstitute (5) http://www.kennedyk rieger.org (6) http://www.cdc. gov/ncbddd/ autism/actearly (7) http://www.cdc. gov/ncbddd/ autism/actearly/ autism.html (8) http://www.firstsig ns.org (9) http://firstwords. fsu.edu (10) http://www.autismsp eaks.org (11) http://www.Autistic Advocacy. org (12) http://www.national autismassociatio n.org (13) http://www.autismon e.org (14) http://www.autism- society.org (15) http://earlyautisms tudy.org (16) http://autismvotes. org (17) mailto:jeremy.singer- vinewsj (DOT) com Copyright 2008 Dow & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Kim Hammons

IPUT Informed Parents United Together

Tampa, Florida

www.iput.org

www.yahoogroups.com Keyword: "IPUT"

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