Friday, March 31, 2006

Clinic Notes: ADHD

Parenting characteristics are a better predictor of ADHD than genetics. Smoking by the mother while she is pregnant has also been associated with ADHD. For the child who does not calm down Ritalin or Adderal is okay for the short term, but special parenting skills for handling the child with ADHD need to be acquired at some point. Even then ADHD may be a problem through the teen years and into adulthood. And normal tasks such as driving a car may be a problem for ADHD kids when they get older. Teens with a history of ADHD are four times more likely to have a wreck. As far as I know, insurance companies have not picked up on this because medical records are confidential, at least to a certain extent. Obviously, if insurance companies knew a teenager they were about to insure had ADHD their rates would go up.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Clinic Notes: Refrigerator Mothers

After American psychiatrist Leo Kanner published the first paper on autism in 1943, psychoanalyst Bruno Bettelheim wrote extensively about so-called “refrigerator mothers,” who were emotionally cold and rejecting. According to Bettelheim these mothers caused a psychosis in their children which was similar to schizophrenia. (Very few autistic children actually develop adult schizophrenia.) Unfortunately, mothers at the time not only had to deal with an autistic child, they also had to deal with their guilt. In the 1960s, following the publication of Bernard Rimland’s Infantile Autism many psychologists, psychiatrists, and of course neurologists, thought biological factors caused autism. I had dinner with Bettelheim in the early 1970s and I tried to discuss with him the role of biological factors in autism. He refused to accept the possibility and told me in no uncertain terms to go read his books. There I would find all of the answers to my questions. At the time he was still saying, for a fee, that moms caused autism. I experienced Bettelheim as a grouchy, depressed old man, and I’ve often wondered if he knew he was wrong and felt badly about all of the guilt he’d caused mothers. (I’d like to think there’s a certain amount of justice in the world.) Excerpted from Little Bubba's Not Ready for Nashville Yet" Available at http://www.ABA4Autism.com

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Clinic Notes: Stem Cell Transplants for Batten Disease

StemCells, Inc. will soon begin clinical trials to evaluate their line of stem cells in the treatment of Batten disease, a rare fatal disorder in children. Children with Batten disease have seizures, loss of motor skills, vision, cognitive function, and speech. This is the first trial of stem cells as a potential therapy in children.
I hope the clinical trials are successful and I wonder if stem cell technology will ever have application with other neurodevelopment disorders in children such as autism.

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Clinic Notes: Preventing Autism

I'm just like any other parent or grandparent. I worry about autism. When I see my grand babies staring at lights or fans I immediately re-direct them. I have been relieved to note that they were not rigid when picked up and they never banged their heads against the side of the crib. One had a slight language delay and the pediatrician suggested a possibility of autism, which scared my daughter, but fortunately, turned out to be a false alarm.
There are other early signs of autism, such as being a younger sibling of a child with autism. The concordance rate for identical twins is 60%, fraternal twins 4.5%, and non-twin siblings 4.5%.
What should a caregivers do if their child shows early signs of autism? Can autism be prevented with early intervention? Next week on my web site www.aba4autims.com I will post a discussion of some recent research.