Guest guest Posted March 14, 2008 Report Share Posted March 14, 2008 It also sounds as if he is dealing with sensory integration dysfunction. The problems you are decribing e.g. hair combing, brushing teeth are really familiar to me. My twins can " technically " complete these tasks but because of very ASD-typical sensory integration problems would rather not. We were lucky to find an OT who is very familiar with sensory problems and worked on those deficits during the boys' sessions. Part of the therapy included the Wilbarger Brushing protocol which made a big difference in one of the kids. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2008 Report Share Posted March 14, 2008 I have read about " dysgraphia " - primarily a handwriting issue but can also affect other fine motor skills - but not all Re: OT question and others It also sounds as if he is dealing with sensory integration dysfunction. The problems you are decribing e.g. hair combing, brushing teeth are really familiar to me. My twins can " technically " complete these tasks but because of very ASD-typical sensory integration problems would rather not. We were lucky to find an OT who is very familiar with sensory problems and worked on those deficits during the boys' sessions. Part of the therapy included the Wilbarger Brushing protocol which made a big difference in one of the kids. ________________________________________________________________________________\ ____ Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page. http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2008 Report Share Posted March 15, 2008 > > He needs to see an occupational therapist who is familiar with the > activities of daily living skills (ADLs) a person with autism requires. He does sound > like he has motor planning problems, which an OT should be able to help with. > He probably could benefit from physical therapy too. You just need to find a > better therapist. Thanks everyone for all the responses. It was very helpful to learn some of the buzzwords like the one above. After sleeping on it, I think you all are right--we probably just need to find a better therapist. I think you all have given me some good places to start. Interestingly, the speech pathologist (which we want to see for pragmatic language) at this same facility seems very good, and I think we'll stick with her. Ruth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2008 Report Share Posted March 15, 2008 > > I'm having problems getting to the bottom of certain types of my 13yo > AS son's problems. His OT tests keep coming back " normal " , but he > can't do things like comb his hair, tie shoes, ride a bike, coordinate > team sports, brush his teeth, etc. There are some things he can do, > like buttons, zippers, using the toilet, using a knife, but he is very > slow. Does anyone know what this is about? > > >>Big snip here<< Ruth, You could have been describing my 10 yr old who also has AS. It is strange because some of the things your son can do are almost impossible for my son but mine is able to do some of the things that are difficult for yours. I firmly believe it is a motor planning issue. I, too, have had difficulty finding someone who thinks that there is a clinical problem that needs to be fixed. I did finally talk the school into giving us help with the buttons, zippers and brushing teeth. I was having a difficult time finding elastic waist pants and velcro tennis shoes in my son's size. I argued that these were adaptive behavior skills that fell squarely within the functional needs that IDEA covers. It did help a lot. My son can now wear jeans to school and tie his own shoes. I also do not have to brush his teeth for him anymore, but he is not great at it. I figure he will get better with more practice. I still have to brush his hair for him. We try to focus on adding just a little to his repertoire at a time. If you end up finding effective help, let us know how you did it. S. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2008 Report Share Posted March 15, 2008 I may have missed this in a previous post, but what area are you in? Our therapy clinic (in Dallas) where my son receives OT truly believes motor planning issues like you describe are something an OT can absolutely address. On Sat, Mar 15, 2008 at 6:54 AM, Stallard wrote: > > > > > I'm having problems getting to the bottom of certain types of my 13yo > > AS son's problems. His OT tests keep coming back " normal " , but he > > can't do things like comb his hair, tie shoes, ride a bike, coordinate > > team sports, brush his teeth, etc. There are some things he can do, > > like buttons, zippers, using the toilet, using a knife, but he is very > > slow. Does anyone know what this is about? > > > > >>Big snip here<< > > Ruth, > > You could have been describing my 10 yr old who also has AS. It is > strange because some of the things your son can do are almost > impossible for my son but mine is able to do some of the things that > are difficult for yours. I firmly believe it is a motor planning > issue. I, too, have had difficulty finding someone who thinks that > there is a clinical problem that needs to be fixed. I did finally talk > the school into giving us help with the buttons, zippers and brushing > teeth. I was having a difficult time finding elastic waist pants and > velcro tennis shoes in my son's size. I argued that these were > adaptive behavior skills that fell squarely within the functional needs > that IDEA covers. It did help a lot. My son can now wear jeans to > school and tie his own shoes. I also do not have to brush his teeth > for him anymore, but he is not great at it. I figure he will get > better with more practice. I still have to brush his hair for him. We > try to focus on adding just a little to his repertoire at a time. > > If you end up finding effective help, let us know how you did it. > > S. > > > -- Peace, Staci http://gabesjourney-gabesmom.blogspot.com Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect. ~ Mark Twain Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2008 Report Share Posted March 15, 2008 > I, too, have had difficulty finding someone who thinks that > there is a clinical problem that needs to be fixed. The neurobehavioral clinic where we took him for his neuropsych eval thought he might have " developmental coordination disorder (DCD) " . I tried to look that up, and it looks like a catch-all for these types of problems that can't be explained by anything else. Cerebral palsy has to be ruled out. However, we haven't found an OT who knows what that is or how to test for this stuff. One thing is, if someone can't put a label on what is problem is, our insurance probably won't cover it. Which reminds me, when the clinic talked to us about the DCD, they said they weren't sure about the DCD, but if they didn't put something down the insurance wouldn't cover the OT evals or therapy. Despite the fact that coordination problems are often part of AS, apparently that isn't enough. I did finally talk > the school into giving us help with the buttons, zippers and brushing > teeth. I wish I could talk our school into this! My son only has a 504 (although he is still under observation), so I know they won't do that at the moment. That'll be great if we can do that privately anyway though. You're making me feel encouraged! I was having a difficult time finding elastic waist pants and > velcro tennis shoes in my son's size. LOL! In case anybody is interested--Land's End has elastic waist pants/shorts with fake zippers (so they look normal) up to at least size 18. They have both cargo-style pants and regular pants, and you can even get them in denim. They have a great sizing chart online too. CWD Kids (I think just online) has them too, and I've gotten them there. My son finally agreed to try denim next time. And Academy has velcro shoes in adult sizes. There is also a shoe store called Vans (kinda expensive) that has all kinds of slip-on shoes (not velcro). > We > try to focus on adding just a little to his repertoire at a time. Yes, that's what we're figuring out (my son wasn't diagnosed until age 12, although I was pretty sure myself by the time he was 11). We're kind of starting all over. > If you end up finding effective help, let us know how you did it. I will. A lot of people seem to have difficulty with this. Ruth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2008 Report Share Posted March 15, 2008 > > I may have missed this in a previous post, but what area are you in? > Our therapy clinic (in Dallas) where my son receives OT truly believes motor > planning issues like you describe are something an OT can absolutely > address. Arg, I'm in the Houston area (north). One person has given one place that they really like in The Woodlands that I'm going to try. I'd still like any other recommendations since who knows if the insurance and everything will work out. I'm still wondering if anyone has any experience with Beyond Boundaries in Conroe? Ruth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2008 Report Share Posted March 15, 2008 My insurance covers my son's OT sessions, the diagnosis the clinic uses: 781.3 - Lack of coordination 728.9 - Muscle/ligament DIS NOS On his chart the name of the therapies used are: CPT code 97112 Neuromuscular re-education CPT code 97530 Therapeutic activities CReece **************It's Tax Time! Get tips, forms, and advice on AOL Money & Finance. (http://money.aol.com/tax?NCID=aolprf00030000000001) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 17, 2008 Report Share Posted March 17, 2008 Ruth and All, That is exactly like my 10 yr. old AS son. A neurologist diagnosed him as having Dyspraxia early on when he was around 5 and he has recieved OT since. From reading the other posts, I never thought about his lack of coordination for brushing hair, teeth and tying shoes as sensory. Our public school provides an in-home trainer to help with ideas, for example the teeth brushing, she provided a picture chart that I taped to the mirror and had to implement daily. That literally meant time and effort on my part. I stood next to him for months and made sure he looked at the pictures and we talked it thru and now all I have to do is ask him did you brush your teeth? If the answer was no, then I prompted, " don't forget to follow your directions. " It's not perfect but as he grows it seems that those once very hard coordination tasks seem to be getting better. I think mostly due to growing up, continuing OT (private and school, which he came back normal range in testing but I brought work samples and private OT report),swimming all summer, believe it or not has really helped, having him play with peers in his neighborhood (so hard sometimes to watch and heartbreaking, but I had to get him out there). He did finally learn to tie his shoes, acutally last week with his private OT. I video taped it on my cell phone and he does it wonderfully now, not perfect, but he is there!!! Our OT just provided a white canvas shoe and had him do it on the ground in front of him over and over. Food issues were the same as your son, but instead of letting it frustrate me I made it fun. I would say, " if you eat one _________ (I put a very small new item on the plate) you can earn 30 min. of game tieme. I then give the rules here like, but you have to keep it in your mouth for 5 seconds and then you have the option of spitting it out. If it is successful we make a big deal about it WAY TO GO! or if he absolutely hated it, we are encouraging, Wow you were a real trooper for trying that, go ahead and play for 20 min. because you really tried something new. I could go on and on but wanted to share this with you and hope that some of this will be insightful. Praying for you both, > > I'm having problems getting to the bottom of certain types of my 13yo > AS son's problems. His OT tests keep coming back " normal " , but he > can't do things like comb his hair, tie shoes, ride a bike, coordinate > team sports, brush his teeth, etc. There are some things he can do, > like buttons, zippers, using the toilet, using a knife, but he is very > slow. Does anyone know what this is about? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.