Showing posts with label websites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label websites. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Article from WebMD

Early Autism Treatment Normalizes Kids' Brains

By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Laura J. Martin, MD
toddler learning shapes and colors
Oct. 29, 2012 -- Early, intensive autism treatment improves children's brain development, a new study shows.

The treatment, dubbed Early Start Denver Model or ESDM, offers a child 20 hours a week of one-on-one treatment with a trained therapist. It also calls for many more hours of the treatment, in the form of structured play, with a parent trained in the technique.

By age 4, children given the treatment had higher IQ scores, more adaptive behavior, better coordination, and a less severe autism diagnosis than kids given the standard autism treatments offered in their communities. But that's not all, researchers Geraldine Dawson, PhD, and colleagues report.

"We jump-started and improved the responses of children's brains to social information," says Dawson, professor of psychiatry at the University of North Carolina and chief science officer at Autism Speaks.

Normal child development depends on interactions with parents and other people. Without such interactions, language and social skills do not develop.
As measured by an electroencephalogram (EEG), small children's brains show a specific pattern of activity when they look at a picture of a human face. This doesn't happen when they look at pictures of inanimate objects.

Just the reverse happens in children with autism. Their brains light up when they look at pictures of objects, but not when they look at faces. This changed dramatically in the children treated with ESDM.

"The [brains of] children who received the ESDM looked virtually identical to typical 4-year-olds," Dawson says. "The children that received the interventions normal in their communities continued to show the reversed pattern."

Changing Brain Development

The treated children weren't cured. They still had autism, Dawson says. But they are continuing to improve.

"These interventions not only alter the trajectory of behavioral development in a child with autism, but also brain development," Dawson says.

Brain development in children given a behavioral autism treatment likely means these children are learning to "work around" their autism, suggests Arthur L. Beaudet, MD, professor of molecular and human genetics, pediatrics, and molecular and cellular biology at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston.

"To the extent early intervention helps brain development, it is more likely to help by letting the brain compensate and get around the problems rather than reverse them," Beaudet says. "We do know if you damage the brain of a young child, like in an accident, the infant brain has a tremendous ability to recover and get around the problem."

Key to Autism Treatment: Start Early

Although she and her colleagues developed the ESDM treatment, Dawson is quick to point out that it's not the only effective autism treatment. The key, she says, isn't the treatment -- it's the timing.
"The important point is early diagnosis," she stresses. "By starting early, we have the best chance of providing these kids with the best possible outcomes."

One key to early diagnosis might be the EEG test used to evaluate outcomes in this study.
"There has already been published data showing these early EEG measures are detecting babies at risk of autism at 12 months of age. They have this unusual pattern of not showing a normal response to social stimuli," she says
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The Dawson study appears in the November issue of Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Parenting Through to Adulthood

Hello Parents AND Educators! In the next few years there is going to be a tsunami of kiddos on the spectrum coming of age....and that is the next area to be explored.

Much like the "Boomer Generation" coming of age when there weren't enough pediatricians (now there are) to today when there aren't enough gerontologists. We need to start planning on the future for our kids when they are 13, 14 or 15!

I cannot take credit for this next post.....I am passing along wonderful information from Michelle Garcia Winner and her site: www.socialthinking.com. She has developed a series of articles on teens and adults with Aspergers that are a wealth of gold.

Here is her first article: "Parenting Through to Adulthood". I will try and link to the article directly:

Her information is pragmatic and you can pick and choose what will fit your individual situation and family. I will continue to have links for her other articles over the next few Mondays.
Happy Reading!

Friday, October 21, 2011

Take a Peek at the Right Side Bar!

I have listed on the right side of this blog several websites that have been very helpful to us on our journey. Wrights Law is simply fabulous and has so much information for parents and educators (on both sides of the IEP table) it is almost sensory overload.

Lose the Training Wheels was created by geniuses who helped our daughter in 4th grade finally learn how to ride a bike....in one day! This allowed her to be active like her peers and bike riding dad and sister.

If you cannot find a social group in your area, please look into Model Me Kids videos. They use actual kids from grade school to junior high age and help model how to act in a club, as a member of a team, examples of how to compromise, how to tell someone if you are being bullied, how to act in the school cafeteria......just a myriad of situations. At the end of school, a teacher asked our daughter what she was going to do over summer vacation...."going to Mom's Social Skills Boot Camp"....and yep we did!