PDA

View Full Version : Link to increased Autism



Wild Cobra
04-09-2012, 05:44 AM
Don't know how real this will pan out to be:

Obese women more likely to have children with autism: study
(http://www.vancouversun.com/health/Obese+women+more+likely+have+children+with+autism+ study/6428730/story.html)

I personally think things like this have a deeper root problem, but generalities don't necessarily apply.

boutons_deux
04-09-2012, 06:22 AM
Vaccines are still as suspect as anything.

Obese women are mal-nourished anyway, overeating and eating crap, are probably pre-diabetic/diabetic (LARGE, overweight babies) and who knows what else.

Lots of recent studies showing nutrition of both the man and woman before conception and during gestation affect the genes and health of the child long term.

boutons_deux
04-09-2012, 08:18 AM
As with just about everything else in medicine, there's huge controversy about who actually has autism

The Autism Wars

THE report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that one in 88 American children have an autism spectrum disorder has stoked a debate about why the condition's prevalence continues to rise. The C.D.C. said it was possible that the increase could be entirely attributed to better detection by teachers and doctors, while holding out the possibility of unknown environmental factors.

But the report, released last month, also appears to be serving as a lightning rod for those who question the legitimacy of a diagnosis whose estimated prevalence has nearly doubled since 2007.

As one person commenting on The New York Times's online article about it put it, parents "want an 'out' for why little Johnny is a little hard to control." Or, as another skeptic posted on a different Web site, "Just like how all of a sudden everyone had A.D.H.D. in the '90s, now everyone has autism."

The diagnosis criteria for autism spectrum disorders were broadened in the 1990s to encompass not just the most severely affected children, who might be intellectually disabled, nonverbal or prone to self-injury, but those with widely varying symptoms and intellectual abilities who shared a fundamental difficulty with social interaction. As a result, the makeup of the autism population has shifted: only about a third of those identified by the C.D.C. as autistic last month had an intellectual disability, compared with about half a decade ago.

Thomas Frazier, director of research at the Cleveland Clinic Center for Autism, has argued for diagnostic criteria that would continue to include individuals whose impairments might be considered milder. "Our world is such a social world," he said. "I don't care if you have a 150 I.Q., if you have a social problem, that's a real problem. You're going to have problems getting along with your boss, with your spouse, with friends."

But whether the diagnosis is now too broad is a subject of dispute even among mental health professionals. The group in charge of autism criteria for the new version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders has proposed changes that would exclude some who currently qualify, reducing the combination of behavioral traits through which the diagnosis can be reached from a mind-boggling 2,027 to 11, according to one estimate.

Biology, so far, does not hold the answers: there is no blood test or brain scan to diagnose autism. The condition has a large genetic component, and has been linked to new mutations that distinguish affected individuals even from their parents. But thousands of different combinations of gene variants could contribute to the atypical brain development believed to be at the root of the condition, and the process of cataloging them and understanding their function has just begun.

http://mobile.nytimes.com/article?a=936159&f=26

As with ADHD in the 90s and many other epidemics, there is epidemic of diagnoses rather than an epidemic of disease. And then they te$$$t and pre$$$cribe indefinitely.

As Chris Rock joked, "Do you got to bed at night? Do you wake up in the morning? We got a drug to fix that!"