Autism

Controversy over dog attending class with an autistic boy

Monday, August 31st, 2009

CHICAGO - Kaleb Drew went to first grade on Tuesday tethered to his Labrador retriever, over the school’s objections, but his family is optimistic they’ll win a court battle to keep the dog in class.

Chewey the Lab, trained to help the autistic boy deal with his disabilities, did “just as he’s supposed to” in keeping Kaleb safe and calm during his first full day back at school, said the boy’s mom, Nichelle Drew.

A Douglas County judge allowed the dog to accompany Kaleb until the family’s lawsuit against Villa Grove Elementary School in east-central Illinois goes to trial in November.

Kaleb’s case and a separate lawsuit involving an autistic boy near St. Louis are the first challenges to an Illinois law allowing service animals in schools, according to an attorney for the Villa Grove school and a spokeswoman for the Illinois Board of Education.

“I hope as time goes by that maybe they’ll see that it’s not causing a problem, and they’ll let the fight go,” Nichelle Drew said. Regardless, she added, “We’re in it for the long haul.”

Officials at both schools maintain that the dogs aren’t true “service” animals and provide only comfort care. They say the autistic boys’ needs have to be balanced against other children who have allergies or fear the dogs. Read more…

Source: Linsey Tanner (AP)

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College for Autistics

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

autistic_collegeThe California State University East Bay campus in the Hayward hills is the site of an unusual experiment in higher education for people with autism. Starting in the fall quarter, college-age autistics will be encouraged to attend and build an educational community; one that draws on the autistics’ unusual academic strengths. The experiment will test the possibilities for autistics in a university setting, and more generally the possibilities for a range of students with disabilities…

…The emerging Center for College Students with Autistic Spectrum Disorders is an attempt to open wider higher education for autistics. The young adults with autism, born in California in the late 1980s and early 1990s when the number of diagnosed cases of autism grew geometrically, are now reaching college age. They and their parents are faced with life after high school. In particular, they are challenged to find alternatives to a life of dependency and Social Security payments that has been the main lot of adult autistics in California.

An estimated 70 percent of adults with autism in California are unemployed, with the majority enrolled in the Supplemental Security Income/Social Security Disability Insurance systems. Much of the growing literature on autistics focuses on their limitations and disabilities: the socially awkward behaviors, the large gaps in cognition and conceptualization, the self-stimulating behavior like spinning or rocking and self-talking.

But it is also true that many students with autism possess academic skills more advanced than many students in computation, observation and documentation. They often bring a different way of looking at the world and a singular creativity. Can these skills and insights be harnessed in ways that allow the students with autism to succeed in college and in the larger world and work world? This question is central to the experiment about to begin in Hayward. Read more…

Source: San Francisco Chronicle

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Autism May be Linked to Mom’s Autoimmune Disease

Monday, July 6th, 2009

autismChildren of mothers who have autoimmune diseases such as type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and celiac disease have up to a three times greater risk for autism, a new study finds.

Although the association between autism and a maternal history of type 1 diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis had been found in earlier research, the researchers behind the new study say that theirs is the first to find a link between autism and celiac disease. People with celiac disease cannot tolerate gluten, a protein in wheat, rye and barley.

“This finding reinforces the suggestion that autoimmune processes are connected somehow with the cause of autism and autism spectrum disorder,” said researcher William W. Eaton, chairman of the Department of Mental Health at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University. “This finding is on the pathway of finding the cause of autism.”

Eaton noted that there is no clinical significance to the finding but that it could guide future research as scientists try to pin down the cause or causes of autism.

For the study, Eaton’s team collected data on 3,325 Danish children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, including 1,089 diagnosed with infantile autism. The children were born between 1993 and 2004, and their data was part of the Danish National Psychiatric Registry. Data on family members with autoimmune diseases came from the Danish National Hospital Register.

The researchers found that children whose mothers had autoimmune disease were at a higher risk of developing autism spectrum disorder than children of mothers who did not have these conditions. In addition, the risk of infantile autism was increased in children with a family history of type 1 diabetes. Read more…

Source: Forbes

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Researchers Announce Breakthrough in Identifying Autism Gene

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

autism_ic_2Researchers say they have found the first piece of the genetic puzzle that could lead to greatly improved diagnosis, treatment and even prevention of autism.

A multi-university team, which included the University of Miami School of Medicine, has identified a gene associated with autism, according to a report published in the peer-reviewed medical journal Nature.

It may be only one of as many as 50 genes involved, and environmental factors are also involved, but Margaret Pericak-Vance, director of UM’s Institute for Human Genomics, says the discovery could lead to practical results within a decade. ”Things are moving so fast, in the next five years or so you can see some of this information being translated maybe into prediction, even therapies,” she said.

The study is a collaboration of the UM institute, Vanderbilt University, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, the University of Washington in Seattle and the University of California, Los Angeles. In the study, research teams visited a dozen sites around the country and studied more than 10,000 subjects, including individuals with autism spectrum disorder, family members and volunteers without the disorder. Read more…

Posted by Carrie Pollare

Source: Miami Herald

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Melatonin May Help Autistic Children Sleep

Friday, April 17th, 2009

sleeping_childA study, published in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, suggests that melatonin may help children with autism or Fragile X syndrome sleep.

Study senior author Beth Goodlin-Jones of the M.I.N.D Institute at the University of California Davis Health System in Sacramento, said that sleep problems are reported in up to 89 percent of children with autism and 77 percent of children with Fragile X syndrome. She explained that sometimes children may take one to two hours to fall asleep and often disrupt the household during this time. Treatment with over-the-counter melatonin supplements might help alleviate some of the stress that parents of special-needs children experience. Read more…

Posted by Carrie Pollare

Source: UPI

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Cartoons Might Help Diagnose Autism

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

cartoonWho knew that such a simple thing as a cartoon could, perhaps, help detect early signs of autism in a child? In a Yale study, researchers created five cartoon versions of children’s games, like “peek-a-boo” and “patty-cake, which were shown to two year olds.” The study found that children with autism did not respond to the action in the cartoons the way other children did and their eyes did not track the fast movements and the noise in the same way. Researchers pointed out that parents can notice their children glazing over to what’s on the television screen as early as eight months old. Read more…

Posted by Carrie Pollare

Source: CBS, Denver

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Hyperbaric Autism Treatment Shows Promise

Monday, March 30th, 2009

hyperbaricAnother autism controversy… Some parents are trying hyperbaric chambers as a treatment for their autistic children. While still unproved as a remedy, there have been reports that this type of therapy, which boosts the amount of oxygen in the child’s brain, has improved the functioning of some autistic children and is not physically dangerous to them, although it can be dangerous to the parent’s financial health at $100 to $900 per treatment.

A small study looked at 56 children, ages 2 to 7, who had varying degrees of autism. Each received 40 one-hour treatments. Thirty of the children had the pressure in the chamber increased by 30 percent, while the 26 children in the control group had the pressure increased by only 3 percent. Results showed that 30 percent of the children who received the treatment reported “greatly increased functioning,” while 8 percent in the control group did.

Others in the field remain skeptical. Read more…

Posted by Carrie Pollare

Source: ABC News

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Autism Tied to Digestion?

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

autsim_giA study by the Vanderbilt University Medical Center has concluded that the same gene may be responsible for both autism and gastrointestinal disorders. Research determined that 118 families out of 214 selected for the study have at least one child with both autism and gastrointestinal issues.

According to Daniel Campbell, the study’s lead author, “Among individuals with autism, 30 percent to 70 percent also have GI problems, including chronic constipation or chronic diarrhea. And, because many of these patients have difficulties with communication, they may act out rather than be able to communicate that their ‘tummy hurts.’” Read more…

Posted by Carrie Pollare

Source: www.tennessean.com

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Is There a Connection between Autism and Rainfall?

Friday, March 6th, 2009

rainYes, you read that right. A study from scientists at Cornell University has raised the possibility that there might be a link between high levels of rainfall and autism. The study was based on prevalence of autism rates in California, Oregon and Washington between 1987 and 1999, which were calculated with daily precipitation reports from the National Climatic Data Center. Although very preliminary, the results showed that there might be a correlation.

Explanations? Rainfall may be associated with more indoor activities that affect behavioral and cognitive development and time spent indoors may also expose children to more dangerous chemicals found in the household. Decreased exposure to sunshine, which helps the body produce vitamin D, may also be a factor. The scientists even said that the rainfall itself may be transporting chemicals from the upper atmosphere. Go figure. To read the entire article, click here.

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A NOTE FROM A FAN OF OUR “I’M TIRED OF AUTISM” BRACELET

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

We just love to share some of the wonderful notes we get from happy customers. Here’s one that came all the way from Australia.

“I just received my ‘I’m Tired of Autism‘ bracelet and wanted to say a big thank you to you. I love it…haven’t taken it off. It feels like I carry a part of my son, who has Autism, and I carry pride for all his achievements wherever I go wearing the bracelet. Your service was so easy and efficient, especially given I am in Australia. I couldn’t believe how quickly it arrived. Your work is fantastic. Thank you. Thank you.”

— Charlotte, North Ryde, Australia

Proceeds from the “I’m Tired of Autism” bracelet go to Jenny McCarthy’s Generation Rescue charity.

If you would like to share your thoughts or experiences with the ITo bracelets and potentially help contribute to our “What’s New” page and also help spread the word, just address your thoughts to share@ImTiredOnline.com

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