Pubmed du 30/06/24
1. Karni-Visel Y, Baum N, Schertz M. Understanding autism and its treatment: The child’s perspective. Soc Sci Med. 2024; 354: 117066.
INTRODUCTION: While parents’ and professionals’ perceptions regarding children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have been studied extensively, limited data regarding the perspectives of children with ASD on their needs and the challenges they face are available. The study aimed to examine how children with ASD understand their condition and the aims of the interventions they undergo. METHODS: Nineteen children and adolescents (ages 5.7-14.2 years) formally diagnosed with ASD, with borderline to high intelligence (range 70-140), and able to converse verbally were interviewed in person at a child development clinic. A qualitative approach was used to capture children’s perceptions of their strengths and challenges and their understanding of a novel ASD treatment. The interview included direct and projective open-ended questions on each topic. Interpretive content analysis was used to evaluate the children’s answers. Medical data were extracted from medical records. The children’s parents completed questionnaires on their children’s disability levels, awareness of ASD diagnosis, and sociodemographic details. FINDINGS: Children spoke of their embodied sensations and feelings and discussed « normality » vs. « disability. » They varied in their awareness of their diagnosis/symptoms, and only one boy named his diagnosis and described its consequences in detail. Most children lacked an understanding of the educational and therapeutic aspects of the goals set for them. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Children with ASD are aware of their unique emotional and behavioral challenges. Nevertheless, they are frequently excluded from the process of patient information provision and lack an understanding of the goals of interventions. Findings suggest the need to explore developmentally and emotionally adaptive ways to involve children with ASD in discussions of their condition and possible interventions.
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2. Medina J, Zhou Z. Unlock the potential: Auditory-evoked event-related potential (ERP) as a treatment-responsive biomarker for Rett syndrome. Neurotherapeutics. 2024: e00389.
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3. So SY, Savidge TC. Impact of gut health and microbiome on autism spectrum disorder. Transl Pediatr. 2024; 13(6): 1012-6.
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4. Wang J, Christensen D, Coombes SA, Wang Z. Cognitive and brain morphological deviations in middle-to-old aged autistic adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2024; 163: 105782.
Cognitive challenges and brain structure variations are common in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) but are rarely explored in middle-to-old aged autistic adults. Cognitive deficits that overlap between young autistic individuals and elderlies with dementia raise an important question: does compromised cognitive ability and brain structure during early development drive autistic adults to be more vulnerable to pathological aging conditions, or does it protect them from further decline? To answer this question, we have synthesized current theoretical models of aging in ASD and conducted a systematic literature review (Jan 1, 1980 – Feb 29, 2024) and meta-analysis to summarize empirical studies on cognitive and brain deviations in middle-to-old aged autistic adults. We explored findings that support different aging theories in ASD and addressed study limitations and future directions. This review sheds light on the poorly understood consequences of aging question raised by the autism community to pave the way for future studies to identify sensitive and reliable measures that best predict the onset, progression, and prognosis of pathological aging in ASD.