Guest guest Posted January 4, 2001 Report Share Posted January 4, 2001 Hi ChickieMom, (Sorry, I forget your first name and you didn't sign it... I am sorry you are in such turmoil. As I said in an earlier post, sometimes I feel lucky that the autism is so blatant for us; there are no questions. Note the word sometimes..... I can't say whether or not your little guy has ASD or not. Getting another eval is a good idea. My friend's daughter has many autistic characteristics, but I don't believe she is autististic. She is WAY too social and appropriately so. As I recall, in order to have the asd label, you need to fit into three categories.....Communication, repetitiveness, and social. Maddie had high scores in all three. I would discuss this with the developmental ped who will do the testing. I know that Dr. Stanley Greenspan feels that many kids are being over'dx'd. He believes they have something called multi-system neurological disorder. Apparently, he came up with this term due to the fact that so many kids were getting the PDD-NOS label which seemed too vague. Here's a quote from his book Children with Special Needs: " We have worked with a number of children diagnosed with autism or PDDNOS between the ages of 18 and 30 months, who, now older, are fully communicative (using complex sentences adaptively), creative, warm, loving, and joyful. They attend regular schools, are mastering early academic tasks, enjoy friendships, and are especially adept at imaginative play. We have introduced the term multi-system neurological disorder to characterize children who have communication problems and are perseverative but can relate or have the potential for relating with joy and warmth " . Not trying to add fuel to fire....just food for thought. My friend really believes her daughter has asd, but she isn't even remotely like Maddie. Certainly, ALL children are different, and that surely applies to kids with DS/ASD as well. However, you just can't convince me or my dh that our friend's daughter has asd. Not only is she very social, she's quite communicative. She does not have much language, but she uses what little she does have, very appropriately. And if she can't find the word, she knows how to get her message across and she recognizes that she needs someone else to get it for her. As far as I'm concerned she's missing major components of two parts of the criteron. I've heard very wonderful things about DuPont. Hopefully, they will be able to give you some answers!! {{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{hugs}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}} and keep us posted!! Donna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2001 Report Share Posted January 4, 2001 Hi. I also thought had ASD, but she wasn't dx'd with it. Anyway, we hadn't been in for her yearly check-up in over a year (she'd been so healthy). So, when we finally had her blood drawn and tested we found out she had Grave's disease (hyperthyroid). Some of the symptoms of this are rapid heart rate which then leads to fatigue, head aches, blurry vision, etc.... always wanted to be alone to just watch her movies. She wasn't cooperative. Was having a hard time at school (laid on the floor and refused to do what they asked). She quit saying words that she previously knew, she quit telling us when she had to go to the bathroom, etc....Anyway, she's been on her med. for Grave's disease for only a little over two weeks now and is sooooo much better! She's laughing again, playing with her toys and interacting with us and her brother and sister and the kids at school. She's only been back to school since Tuesday, but has gotten great reports every day! I re-read this and it seems pretty confusing, but I hope you get the picture. I don't think is Autistic anymore. I think she just couldn't tell us how lousy she felt and this could have been going on for over a year. I think we're on the right track now. Hope this helps, > Hi I have been not posting here for about a month, maybe longer. I > think i am in denial about the ASD. But in my heart I don't believe > my son is autistic. I have wrestled with this for awhile now. He has > some of the behaviors yes...licking, obsessive, agressive, hard time > with change. But do these constitute a ASD diagnoses? I am at such a > loss. We are going to be getting him evaluated again at the end of > this month at Duponts with a behavioral/developemental doctor. My son > does not have a lack of empathy, he does so well in so many areas? > couldnt he be just OCD? (obsessive compulsive disorder?) Some days i > think, yea he must have this but this week i have been sick and my > little one will check me for a fever cover me up and give me a kiss:) > I don't want to offend anyone here thats not my intent but what > REALLY constitues a autism spectrum diagnosis? I am so lost. Could he > have some other sort of problem? > > His behavior lately had been better, less agression and accepting > change much better. Being more cooperative. I dont know what bough > about the change but i welcomed it. Some days it was a joy to be with > him again (is that a terrible thing to say? ) but little by little > this week i see him going backwards again...and there seems to be no > reason WHY??? > > I am trying to figure this all out. If he REALLY is ASD, then i don't > want to spend my life in denial but if hes not then it means i gotta > find out what the problem is. > > We tried to meds that made him worse, paxil and luvox. He was manic > on it for the first few days then he would eventually slide into more > agression then he shows off the meds. So no meds at all right now, am > very nervous about trying others. on a light note his behavior seemed > to improve after starting him on some vitamins , B complex and > vitamin E....we also still try the epsom salt baths. hmm now i think > about it he hasnt had for one about a week and he's not sleeping as > well, maybe thats an idea??? > > well have been reading here and would like to get back into posting. > hope people remember me and ideas and advice would be appreciated. > take care Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2001 Report Share Posted January 4, 2001 Marie is that you? I remember the chick part! LOL Sorry you are having a hard time. I think it's really hard to see our kids the way others do, but I will always follow my instincts. I don't believe Seth is Autistic either, but there is something more than Downs. But for now the label gets him what he needs, so I'm not rocking the boat! LOL Please write again and let us know what happens with the 2nd opinion? Gail, Mom to; Seth-4 DS/ASD/PDD/PICA, jo-8, Becky-10, -23, Jen-25, Grandma to Errick-4 and wife to -my hero Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 4, 2001 Report Share Posted April 4, 2001 Hi I remember you, but I dont' recall your name. I think we all go through what you have described. When the psychiatrist first told me Matt had " Autistic Behaviors " , I thought he was nuts and told him so. I asked everyone I could think of- he was going to a full day, inclusive preschool where there were 2 other little boys with full fledged autsim. Their mom hired a private teacher to go with them, " helping' them in this setting. This teacher told me in no uncertain terms that Matt was NOT autistic, and since she had lots of experience with Autism, I believed her-for a short time. As time went on, and more and more of the behavior, the regression, aggression, insistance on the same, side glancing, etc... none of it went away. He looked more and more different from other kids with Down Syndrome. Not that everyone needs to look alike, but Matt is different. Very different. I really think, especially with our kids, that it takes a while for this diagnosis to be fully manifested. You are going about this is the right way-getting full evaluations from knowledgable people. Remember, autism is a word. You son doesnt' change because of a word. He is still who he is, you can just now look at some other, possibly more effective methods for teaching him. It can explain a lot of his behavior. Matt also has periods of time that he is more " on " and can be sympathetic. I think these are more learned responses to certain stimuli. But he does try. The Down syndrome seems to " soften " some of the autistic charactertistics and the autism seems to change some of the things that kids with DS usually do. Any way you look at it, he is still the same boy you had, but it can be a hoop to jump through to get more services that he needs. Good luck We will be praying for you from here. mary S ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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