Asperger’s Syndrome

Asperger disorder is a form of pervasive developmental disorder characterized by persistent impairment in social interactions, repetitive behavior patterns, and restricted interests. Unlike autistic disorder, no significant aberrations or delays occur in language development or cognitive development. Asperger disorder is generally evident in children older than 3 years and occurs more often in boys.

Children with this disorder often exhibit a limited capacity for spontaneous social interactions, a failure to develop friendships, and a limited number of intense and highly focused interests. Although some people with Asperger disorder may have certain communication problems, including poor nonverbal communication and pedantic speech, many individuals have good cognitive and verbal skills. Bowler and colleagues have reported that, although people with Asperger disorder have fewer memories, the experiences of remembering are qualitatively similar in people with Asperger disorder compared with healthy control subjects.1 Physical symptoms may include early childhood motor delays, clumsiness, fine motor difficulty, gait anomalies, and odd movements.

Individuals with Asperger disorder have normal or even superior intelligence and may make great intellectual contributions while demonstrating social insensitivity or even apparent indifference toward loved ones. Published case reports of individuals with Asperger disorder suggest an association with the capacity to accomplish cutting-edge research in computer science, mathematics, and physics. Although the deficits manifested by those with Asperger disorder are often debilitating, many individuals experience positive outcomes, especially those who excel in areas not dependent on social interaction.

Persons with Asperger disorder have exhibited outstanding skills in mathematics, music, and computer sciences. Many are highly creative, and many prominent individuals demonstrate traits suggesting Asperger syndrome. For example, biographers describe Albert Einstein as a person with highly developed mathematical skills who was unaware of social norms and insensitive to the emotional needs of family and friends.

Although normal language and cognitive development differentiate Asperger disorder from other developmental disorders, the severe social impairment associated with this condition overlaps with disorders such as high-functioning autism (HFA).

De Spiegeleer and Appelboom (2007) have pointed out that Asperger syndrome is an autism spectrum disorder. For clinical management purposes, Asperger disorder and HFA may be considered together. Impaired social skills are associated with several other conditions (eg, developmental learning disability of the right hemisphere, nonverbal learning disability, schizoid personality disorder, semantic-pragmatic processing disorder, social-emotional learning disabilities).

What is Autistic?

What Does It Mean to be Autistic

Autism is a brain disorder that too often results in a lifetime of impaired thinking, feeling, and social functioning — our most uniquely human attributes. Autism typically affects a person’s ability to communicate, form relationships with others, and respond appropriately to the external world. The disorder becomes apparent in children generally by the age of 3.

Autism (sometimes referred to as “classical autism”) is the most common condition in a group of developmental disorders known as the autism spectrum disorders.

Other autism spectrum disorders include:

  • Childhood disintegrative disorder
  • Asperger syndrome
  • Rett syndrome
  • Pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified (usually called PDD-NOS).

Experts estimate that three to six children out of every 1,000 will become autistic. Males are four times more likely to be autistic than females. Autistic girls with tend to have more severe symptoms and greater cognitive impairment.

Common Autistic Behaviors

Autism is characterized by three distinctive behaviors. Autistic children:

  • Display problems with verbal and nonverbal communication
  • Have difficulties with social interaction
  • Exhibit repetitive behaviors or narrow, obsessive interests.

Some autistic people can function at a relatively high level, with speech and intelligence intact. Others have serious cognitive impairments and language delays, and some never speak.

In addition, autistic individuals may seem closed off and shut down, or locked into repetitive behaviors and rigid patterns of thinking. An autistic infant may avoid eye contact, seem deaf, and abruptly stop developing language. The child may act as if unaware of the coming and going of others, or physically attack and injure others without provocation. Autistic infants often remain fixated on a single item or activity, rock or flap their hands, seem insensitive to burns and bruises, and may even mutilate themselves.

Autism Education

The Importance of Autism Aducation

Early and intensive autism education can help children grow and learn new skills. The goal of this education is to help with the difficult symptoms of autism in a child and to improve the child’s skills that help him or her talk, interact, play, learn, and care for his or her needs.

Where to Find Education for those with Autism

For every child eligible for special programs, each state guarantees special education and related services. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) is a federally mandated program that assures a free and appropriate public education for children with diagnosed learning deficits. Usually, children are placed in public schools, and the school district pays for all necessary services. These will include, as needed, services provided by the following:

  • Speech therapists
  • Occupational therapists
  • School psychologists
  • Social workers
  • School nurses
  • Aides.

By law, the public schools must prepare and carry out a set of instruction goals or specific skills for every child in a special education program. The list of skills is known as the child’s Individualized Education Program (IEP). The IEP is an agreement between the school and the family on the child’s goals. When your child’s IEP is developed, you will be asked to attend the meeting. Several people will be at this meeting, including a special education teacher, a representative of the public schools who is knowledgeable about the program, other individuals invited by the school or by you (you may want to bring a relative, a child care provider, or a supportive close friend who knows your child well). Parents play an important part in creating the program, as they know their child best. Once your child’s IEP is developed, a meeting is scheduled once a year to review your child’s progress and to make any alterations to reflect his or her changing needs.

If your child is under three years of age, he or she should be eligible for an early intervention program; this program is available in every state. Each state decides which agency will be the lead in the early intervention program. These services are provided by workers qualified to care for toddlers with disabilities and are usually in the child’s home or a place familiar to the child. The services provided are written into an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) that is reviewed at least once every six months. The plan will describe services that will be provided to the child, but will also describe services for parents to help them in daily activities with their child and for siblings to help them adjust to having a brother or sister with an autism spectrum disorder.

Autism: Kids Put At Risk

James Coman’s son has an unusual skill. The 7-year-old, his father says, can swallow six pills at once.

Diagnosed with autism as a toddler, he had been placed on an intense regimen of supplements and medications aimed at treating the disorder. He was injected with vitamin B12 and received intravenous infusions of a drug used to leach mercury and other metals from the body. He took megadoses of vitamin C, a hormone and a drug that suppresses testosterone.

This complex regimen — documented in court records as part of a bitter custody battle over the Chicago boy between Coman, who opposes the therapies, and his wife — may sound unusual, but it isn’t.

Thousands of U.S. children undergo these therapies and more at the urging of physicians who say they can successfully treat, or “recover,” children with autism, a disorder most doctors and scientists say they cannot yet explain or cure.

After reviewing thousands of pages of court documents and scientific studies and interviewing top researchers in the field, an investigation by the Chicago Tribune found that many of these treatments amount to uncontrolled experiments on vulnerable children.

The therapies often go beyond harmless New Age folly, the investigation found. Many are unproven and risky, based on flawed, preliminary or misconstrued scientific research.

Lab tests used to justify therapies are often misleading and misinterpreted. And though some parents fervently believe their children have benefited, the investigation found a trail of disappointing results from the few clinical trials conducted to evaluate the treatments objectively.

Studies show that up to three-quarters of families with children with autism try alternative treatments. Doctors, many linked to the influential group Defeat Autism Now, promote the therapies online, in books and at conferences.

The investigation found children undergoing day-long infusions of a blood product that carries the risk of kidney failure and anaphylactic shock. Researchers in the field emphatically warn that the therapy should not be used to treat autism.

Children are repeatedly encased in pressurized oxygen chambers normally used after scuba diving accidents. This unproven therapy is meant to reduce inflammation that experts say is little understood and may even be beneficial.

Children undergo rounds of chelation therapy to leach heavy metals from the body, though most toxicologists say the test commonly used to measure the metals is meaningless and the treatment potentially harmful.

Last year, the National Institutes of Health halted a controversial government-funded study of chelation before a single child with autism was treated. Researchers at Cornell University and UC Santa Cruz had found that rats without lead poisoning showed signs of cognitive damage after being treated with a chelator.

Doctors associated with the autism recovery movement often say they know that more research is needed but that children need help now.

“We can’t wait for 10 or 20 years,” pediatrician Dr. Elizabeth Mumper, medical coordinator for the Autism Research Institute (the nonprofit parent organization of Defeat Autism Now), testified in a special federal court.

Many parents who try alternative therapies cite an analogy popularized by a luminary of the movement: It’s as if their child has jumped off a pier. Science hasn’t proved that throwing a life preserver will save the child, but they have a duty to try, right?

Critics say that’s the wrong way to think about it.

“How do they know the life preserver is made of cork and not lead?” said Richard Mailman, a neuropharmacologist at Penn State University. “However desperate you are, you don’t want to throw your child a lead life preserver.”

“Dangerous experimentation” is how pediatrician Dr. Steven Goodman, a clinical trial expert at the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics, describes use of these unproven therapies.

One in 100 U.S. children is diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder by age 8, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Though behavioral therapies can help, there are no cures for the disorder, which is characterized by communication problems, difficulties interacting socially and rigid, repetitive behavior.

But clinicians and others in the recovery movement readily offer treatments and hope.