Guest guest Posted March 1, 2005 Report Share Posted March 1, 2005 Hi Inga; Autistic spectrum disorders is an umbrella term for several dx's as per the DSM-1V. What they all have in common is impairment in a triad of areas: 1) Communication 2)Social Skills 3)Imagination Although in varying degrees of severity and differences in intelligence. It is determined by professionals who use various checklists. The following are some of the actual dx's: 1) Asperger's Syndrome: these people have either normal to genius level IQ's. These people usually do much better on their verbal iq's than performance. They are usually very verbal; but may have some strange aspects to their communication; such as being too literal, semantic pragmatic problems, or being overly pedantic. Another hallmark of AS is obssessions; sometimes odd obssessions. Many are clumsy and have poor handwriting. They also suffer from lack of social intuition , a phenomenon known as " mind Blindness " . (it's called the absent minded professor syndrome; usually they excel in science , art, math, etc.) My son has to learn all social skills thru his superior logic skills, because he just doesn't see the hidden social stuff that others can intuit.Other , famous cases of Asperger's Syndrome have been attributted to Bill Gates, Albert Einstein, and Glenn Gould. 2) HFA : very similar to AS; except that some say that High Functioning Autistic people do better on performance rather than verbal iq; and many are much better at gross motor skills. I'm pretty sure that HFA does not have the same standard of normal to superior intelligence to be dxed; but I could be wrong. Most of us who have AS kids and know HFA kids, or those who have both usually think the HFA kids are a lot easier to deal with; usually a lot less argumentative, etc. 3)PDD-NOS: Means that someone has autistic traits, but not enough to get any of the other dx's on the spectrum. 4) Classical or Kanner autism: these are the people that most people think of when they think of autistics. 5) Child Disintegrative Disorder: These kids develop normally until their 1-2 year; then they lose all their skills . Heartbreaking. 6) Rhett's SDyndrome: only affects girls. They say that this form is always accompanied by mental retardation, but I've seen people affected with Rhettes online who had superior intelligence; but they just could not speak because they had messed up neuro pathways between the mouth and brain.However, a few have made superb websites! Hope this helps; Sim > Sim, > It probably doesn't matter much, but I would like to know just what it means > to be " on the spectrum " . > > I was recently told at a mercury toxicity yahoo site that I was " on the > autistic spectrum " . > > > I question the credibility of the person that told me this, however, how can > I question what is being told me when I do not know what it means? What does > it mean, exactly? > > ~Inga > > > > > Hi ; > > > > I'm so sorry to hear about everything you have (and are still) > > going thru. I, also, have a child on the spectrum. He is 8 with > > asperger's syndrome. > > > > Sim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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