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By Serena Gordon, HealthScoutNews
No one knows exactly what causes autism, but
researchers are zeroing
in on some basic biological differences between
autistic children and
children who develop normally.
New research has found that young autistic children
have larger
Brains than most kids. But bigger isn't necessarily
better, because the autistic
children were not able to recognize or react to
changes in other people's
emotions.
"These studies tell us that autism involves
problems in very basic
levels of social and emotional processing,"
says Geraldine Dawson, one of
the researchers and the director of the University
of Washington Autism
Center.
The University of Washington researchers studied
a group of about 50
children who were 3 and 4 years old. Some were
autistic, some had
developmental delays and others developed normally.
The autistic children
had varying levels of autistic symptoms, says
Dawson.
One of the first things Dawson's colleague, Dr.
Stephen Dager, a
professor of psychiatry and radiology, noted was
that the brains of the
autistic children were about 10 percent larger
than those of normal or
developmentally delayed children, according to
Dawson.
At birth, all of the children's heads measured
a normal size, so
something happened between birth and age 3 in
the autistic children to
accelerate the growth of their brains, she says.
Using a special type of magnetic resonance imaging,
Dager also
discovered that one portion of the brain, the
amygdala, was
disproportionately larger in autistic children.
The amygdala is a part of
the brain used for emotional processing, particularly
for picking up cues
on people's emotions, according to Dawson. It
is located in the lobes on
either side of the brain behind the temples.
"This finding is intriguing because we know
autism involves problems
connecting with people's emotions," says
Dawson.
Dawson's team wanted to see how well autistic
children would react
To pictures of people showing different emotional
expressions.
After being fitted with sensors that monitored
their brain activity,
the children were shown two pictures. One was
of a woman with a neutral
expression. The other showed the woman with a
frightened expression.
Dawson says the researchers chose the fear expression
for two
reasons.
The first is that the amygdala is sensitive to
picking up on fear.
From research on normally developing children,
it is known that by the age
of 7 months, babies show a different reaction
to a fear face than to a
neutral one. Dawson says this response probably
developed during evolution
because it would be important to be able to respond
if another member of
your species was showing fear.
However, she says, the children with autism had
no difference in
Brain activity when shown the two pictures, while
the normally developing
Children showed a larger brain response when they
saw the fear picture.
"This suggests that at a very basic level
. . . these children are
not really interpreting or responding to emotional
cues in a normal way,"
Dawson says. "Some pretty basic brain systems
are disrupted."
Knowing this could lead to better and earlier
intervention programs,
she adds. "If at 10 to 12 months, a baby
is not responding, it would alert
us that we should be checking the child for autism,"
she says. And early
intervention is important because the earlier
treatment starts, the more
chance there is to rewire the developing brain,
she adds.
The findings of these studies were presented early
last month at the
first International Meeting for Autism Research,
which was part of the
annual meeting for the Society for Neuroscience.
"This is an extremely important area of investigation,"
says Dr.
Eric London, vice president of medical affairs
for the National Alliance for
Autism Research.
"There could be a very discreet biological
system involved in facial
recognition," London adds, and if this is
the case, there could end up
being a relatively simple biological treatment
for it when researchers discover
exactly what's going wrong in the autistic brain.
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