Posted Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Newly
released findings from Bradley Hospital published in the Journal of the
American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry have found that
autism spectrum disorders (ASD) affect the brain activity of children
and adults differently.
In the study, titled “Developmental Meta-Analysis of the Functional
Neural Correlates of Autism Spectrum Disorders,” Daniel Dickstein, M.D.,
FAAP, director of the Pediatric
Mood, Imaging and Neurodevelopment Program at Bradley Hospital,
found that autism-related changes in brain activity continue into
adulthood.
“Our study was innovative because we used a new technique to directly
compare the brain activity in children with autism versus adults with
autism,” said Dickstein. “We found that brain activity changes
associated with autism do not just happen in childhood, and then stop.
Instead, our study suggests that they continue to develop, as we found
brain activity differences in children with autism compared to adults
with autism. This is the first study to show that.”
This new technique, a meta-analysis, which is a study that compiles
pre-existing studies, provided researchers with a powerful way to look
at potential differences between children and adults with autism.
Dickstein conducted the research through Bradley Hospital’s PediMIND
Program. Started in 2007, this program seeks to identify biological and
behavioral markers—scans and tests—that will ultimately improve how
children and adolescents are diagnosed and treated for psychiatric
conditions. Using special computer games and brain scans, including
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), Dickstein hopes to one day make the
diagnosis and treatment of autism and other disorders more specific and
more effective.
Among autism’s most disabling symptoms is a disruption in social skills,
so it is noteworthy that this study found significantly less brain
activity in autistic children than autistic adults during social tasks,
such as looking at faces. This was true in brain regions including
the right hippocampus and superior temporal gyrus—two brain regions
associated with memory and other functions.
Dickstein noted, “Brain changes in the hippocampus in children with
autism have been found in studies using other types of brain scan,
suggesting that this might be an important target for brain-based
treatments, including both therapy and medication that might improve how
this brain area works.”
Rowland Barrett, Ph.D., chief psychologist at Bradley Hospital and
chief-of-service for The
Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities was also part of
the team leading the study.
“Autism spectrum disorders, including autistic disorder, Asperger’s
disorder, and pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified
(PDD-NOS), are among the most common and impairing psychiatric
conditions affecting children and adolescents today,” said Barrett. “If
we can identify the shift in the parts of the brain that autism affects
as we age, then we can better target treatments for patients with ASD.”
Filed under: Bradley, Bradley Hasbro Children's Research Center,
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