Register / Retrieve Password
x Toggle Content DONATIONS x
x
x
Donate through CAFOnline


Donate Securely with Charities Aid Foundation and help us raise much needed funds for BASIC Charity Reg. Nr. 1115309

Thank You For Your Support!



"Autism = Solution is Understanding"

x x x

x Toggle Content Main Menu x
x
x
x x x

x Toggle Content Survey x
x
x
How many children are on the spectrum in your family?

1
56 %56 %56 %
2
25 %25 %25 %
3
5 %5 %5 %
4
3 %3 %3 %
more
1 %1 %1 %
I'm not sure
7 %7 %7 %
Results :: Polls

Votes: 127
Comments: 1
x x x

x Toggle Content Autism Statistics x
x
x
x x x

x Toggle Content Autism News x
x
x
x x x

News › Autism reaching 'epidemic' levels
x Autistic Society Mission x
x x

Our mission is to unite parents, families, friends, individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder and professionals by creating a strong, supportive community worldwide.

Sharing first hand knowledge, information, news and research about Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Together we can build a better understanding and awareness of autism around the globe and help each other in need.

If you have a question post it in our forum, somebody in our community may know the answer.


"Autism = Solution is Understanding"





x
x x x

x Google-Search x
x x
Google
Web autisticsociety.org
x
x x x

x Autism Statistics: Autism reaching 'epidemic' levels x
x x
Autism Statistics Posted by Sylvia on Sunday, February 01, 2004 (11:25:37)

Naples News 01/02/2004

By Joan Lowy

It's one of the worst nightmares a parent can imagine — without warning, a child is abducted from his bed in the middle of the night, never to return.

Now, imagine that instead of taking the whole child, only his mind is stolen and his body — the hollow shell of his being — is left behind.

That's the way parents of children with autism feel, said Hollywood producer Jon Shestack, whose 11-year-old son is autistic.

"If one in every 250 children in America were actually being abducted, that would be a national emergency," Shestack said. "But, that is what is happening with autism and it is a national emergency."

Autism — a devastating brain disorder that usually appears before age 3 and affects a child's ability to communicate, form relationships and respond to the world around him — used to be rare, but is now at least as prevalent as childhood cancer or diabetes. Though the disorder takes many forms, in most cases children seem to withdraw into their own worlds.

In the 1970s, autism was estimated to have affected about 1 in 2,500 to 5,000 children. Studies show it occurs today in 1 in 150 to 500 children. About 1.5 million Americans are autistic. Boys are affected three to four times as often as girls.

Although the phenomenon has been reported across the country and in much of the industrialized world, some scientists believe the increase is due to an expansion of diagnostic criteria and better identification of children with autism. However, a study commissioned by the California General Assembly concluded that the increase cannot be explained away by better data or past misclassification.

Some scientists, public health advocates and parents are calling it an epidemic. The question they are asking is whether some facet of modern society — toxic chemicals, vaccines, changes in lifestyle or diet — is stealing children's minds.

Relatively little is known about the cause of autism, first identified in 1943. Money for research was almost nonexistent until parents began lobbying Congress and raising funds themselves after autism rates began climbing in the 1990s.

"In 1993, there were probably 12 scientists in the whole country who were lonely and devoted and in a desert working on autism," said Shestack, who helped create the research foundation, Cure Autism Now, with his wife, Portia Iversen.

Autism has long been regarded as one of the most strongly inherited neurological disorders. Studies of identical twins show that if one twin has autism, the other twin will also have autism 60 percent to 80 percent of the time.

However, if genetics alone were the cause, the rate would be closer to 100 percent since identical twins have identical genes. Also, genetics alone cannot explain the apparent increases since, scientists say, there is "no such thing as a genetic epidemic."

"The only way you can explain the increase is if there are environmental factors that are strongly expressed and relatively widely distributed in the environment," said Dr. Mike Merzenich, a neuroscientist at the University of California-San Francisco.

Scientists already know that chemical exposure during pregnancy can cause autism. A third of the children of women who took thalidomide — a drug used in the 1960s to treat morning sickness that is infamous for causing deformed arms and legs — were also autistic if the exposure took place between the 19th and 24th day of pregnancy, which coincides with the beginning stages of brain development.

"I think it's a fair assumption that it's probably going to be genes plus some environmental factor," said David Amaral, research director of the M.I.N.D Institute in Sacramento, Calif. The mission of the institute, founded by four fathers of autistic children, is to find the causes of childhood neurological disorders generally and autism in particular.

"Environmental factors could play on the brain at any point in time," said Amaral, a professor of medical psychiatry at the University of California-Davis. "It could be maternal ingestion of mercury or postnatal lead exposure — we don't have consistent enough facts about autism to know. . ."

About 30 percent of autism cases are accompanied by seizures. Infections, immune system problems and food allergies also seem to be involved, along with gastrointestinal problems and sleep disturbances.

Children with other neurological conditions like attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, learning disabilities and anxiety disorders often have immune system problems as well, scientists said.

The immune system problems are "a very important clue," said Dr. David Carpenter, director of the Institute for Health and the Environment at State University of New York-Rensselaer. "The immune system has functions that regulate the brain function that we hadn't previously understood. For instance, the dementia that comes with age is, basically, an immune system disease."

Scientists also note that toxic chemical exposure often results in damage to more than one bodily system. The immune system and the nervous system share similarities in that they are both signaling systems.

Likewise, viruses usually affect more than one system and are also a focus of research. Scientists know, for example, that mothers who contract influenza during the first trimester of pregnancy are more likely to have children who develop schizophrenia.

"What frightens me is the number of environmental toxins and environmental influences that we don't know anything about," Amaral said.

More than 80,000 new chemicals have been introduced into the marketplace since the post-World War II rise of the petrochemical industry. In most cases, there is no publicly available test data on their potential neurodevelopmental effects on the fetus and young children through long term, low dose exposure or at critical windows in development.

In the largest study of its kind, researchers at the University of California-Davis are preparing to study 2,000 children — including 700 children with autism — to see if there are genetic patterns or patterns of chemical exposure in autistic children that aren't found in the general population.

Among the chemicals that children will be tested for are PCBs — chemicals widely used to insulate electrical equipment but banned in the 1970s because of their toxic effects. Tests also will be done on their chemical cousins, PBDEs, as well as a variety of heavy metals like mercury and lead, pesticides, medications and compounds found in cleaning products, cosmetics and other consumer items.

"We're trying to understand if kids with autism have significantly different levels of chemicals of environmental concern and whether they are more sensitive than the typical child to the same exposure," said toxicology professor Isaac Pessah, who is overseeing the research.

PBDEs are flame retardants widely used in the foam cushions inside furniture and car seats; the hard plastic casings of computers and other office equipment; and hundreds of other products. Little attention had been paid to them until five years ago when Swedish researchers discovered them in the breast milk of nursing mothers. The highest levels recorded by far have been in American women.

PBDEs are of "special interest," Pessah said, "because that is what kids are being exposed to in relatively high levels in their homes. These flame retardants aren't off somewhere in a Superfund toxic waste site — they are incorporated into computers and many other conveniences of modern life."

Autistic children often show no sign of the disorder at birth and appear to develop normally until about 15 months of age when they suddenly regress, losing the few words and skills they have learned.

Dr. George Lambert, a pediatrician and autism researcher at Rutgers University, has been extensively testing the homes of New Jersey children looking for elevated levels of suspect chemicals that might be triggering the regression.

When his research was briefly mentioned in a local newspaper, he was flooded with phone calls from desperate parents of autistic children seeking to be included in the study, Lambert said. Several parents offered to pay the $20,000 per house cost of the testing if they could be included, he said.

While research into potential environmental factors is growing, the search for an autism gene commands the bulk of the research dollars. Some scientists believe that combinations of as many as 20 genes may be involved.

Still, there are many unanswered questions that suggest more than genetics is involved. For example, why doesn't autism just die out? After all, people with autism generally don't have children and parents of autistic children often decide not to have more children.

"There is a huge component to autism that is genetic," Pessah said, "but that's like saying there is a huge genetic component to cancer so therefore there are no chemicals in the environment that cause cancer. You can see the flaw in that logic."


x
x x x
x x Posted by Sylvia on Sunday, February 01, 2004 (11:25:37) (14254 reads) x x

"Autism Statistics: Autism reaching 'epidemic' levels" | Login/Create an Account | 0 comments
Threshold
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

x Encyclopedia x
x x
x
x x x

x Toggle Content Related Links x
x
x
 statistics
 Autism education
 More about Autism Statistics


Most read story about Autism Statistics:
Autism Statistics
x x x

x Toggle Content Article Rating x
x
x
Average Score: 3.66
Votes: 6


Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

x x x

x Toggle Content Options x
x
x
x x x

x Toggle Content User Info x
x
x
Membership:
Latest: arachael
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 7437

People Online:
Members: 0
Visitors: 8
Total: 8
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Archive
02: Archive
03: Autism News
04: Your Account
05: Autism RSS Feeds
06: Autism RSS Feeds
07: Your Account
08: Autism RSS Feeds

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
x x x

x Toggle Content Register - It's free! x
x
x

Click here to register, it's free and easy. This will enable you to post in the FORUM, submit ARTICLES, upload to the GALLERY and lots more.

x x x

x Toggle Content LEA Advice - IPSEA x
x
x
IPSEA Statutory Assessment Advice

Your guide how to ask LEA for a statutory assessment.
Various advice and model letters to download
x x x

x Toggle Content Parent Guide x
x
x
x x x

x Toggle Content SEN x
x
x
x x x

x Toggle Content Autism RSS Feeds x
x
x
x x x

x Toggle Content Autism Video Box x
x
x
x x x

AutisticSociety.org News Feed AutisticSociety.org Forums Feed RSS Module Feeds
Autistic Society Some Rights Reserved
Information presented through this website is not intended to be a substitute for professional consultation.
Interactive software released under GNU GPL, Code Credits, Privacy Policy
TCD_Sylvia Theme by © TreasureCoastDesigns.com