Guest guest Posted August 26, 2001 Report Share Posted August 26, 2001 FEAT DAILY NEWSLETTER Sacramento, California http://www.feat.org " Healing Autism: No Finer a Cause on the Planet " ______________________________________________________ August 26, 2001 Search www.feat.org/search/news.asp AUTISM RESEARCH FUNDING * No FEAT Dragging To Promote Autism Research Walk-a-Thons CARE * Mom, Disabled Son Struggle With Rules SCIENCE * Amygdala: Face and Fear Processing No FEAT Dragging To Promote Autism Research Walk-a-Thons East Coast: Walking the Walk For Autistic Son [by Tamer El-Ghobashy NY Daily News.] http://www.nydailynews.com/2001-08-26/News_and_Views/City_Beat/a-123098.asp For the first two years after Marty and Caryn Schwartzman of Bayside had twins eight years ago, they took snapshots and documented their children's first steps and first words. But after Allyson and Robby celebrated their second birthdays, the Schwartzmans began noticing a difference in their children's behavior: Allyson continued to develop her speech, while Robby struggled with simple words. After visits to several doctors, Robby was diagnosed with autism, a brain disorder marked by severe inability to interact socially. It affects boys four times as often as it does girls. For three years, the parents hunted for information on the disease. " Those were the worst years of our lives, " said Marty Schwartzman. " We felt we were losing control. Robby's behavior was so bad, and we knew we needed to turn our lives around. " The desperate parents eventually found several local support groups for parents of autistic children. The groups provided information and worked with national organizations dedicated to finding cures and better treatment. Last year, the Schwartzmans realized a milestone: With support from the North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, they organized a fund-raising walk at Eisenhower Park in East Meadow, L.I. " The adrenaline rush [at] seeing all these people coming out to support your cause is unbelievable, " Schwartzman said. " It's a phenomenal feeling. " Last year, the 3.1-mile walk attracted about 4,000 people who helped raise more than $600,000 for the National Alliance for Autism Research. The group's primary mission is to fund research into the causes, prevention, treatment and cure of autism and related disorders. " It's a dream come true to have an organization and people committed to an affliction that my son has, " he said. " We are offering hope for these children and their families. " This year, Schwartzman hopes to double the turnout and has set a goal of raising $1 million. The walk is set for Sept. 29 starting at 9 a.m. Autism is believed to occur in as many as one in 500 births, and is among the most inheritable of all brain disorders. For information about the walk, call . * * * West Coast: 2nd UC M.I.N.D. Institute " Walk For Hope " Set Sept. 8 walk to benefit neurodevelopmental disorder research The UC M.I.N.D. Institute will kickoff its second annual benefit walk Sept. 8 at 9 a.m. with the groundbreaking of the institute's new 136,000 square-foot facility. More than 2,500 walkers are expected to join in the groundbreaking ceremony just before the 5k " Walk for Hope " start. s will then journey around the UC Medical Center neighborhood for 5 kilometers, or 3.1 miles. Funds raised by the walk will benefit clinical, research and educational programs at the institute, which studies and treats neurodevelopmental disorders. Proceeds from the walk will contribute to the understanding, care and cure of autism, fragile X syndrome, Tourette's syndrome, dyslexia, attention deficit disorder, cerebral palsy and Asperger's syndrome and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Since parents and UC clinicians and researchers founded the UC M.I.N.D. Institute in 1998, more than $5 million has been distributed to leading scientists who are working on collaborative research projects aimed at understanding or treating neurodevelopmental disorders. " Our goal is to create an internationally recognized, world-class research and training institute to study and understand the full spectrum of childhood neurodevelopmental disabilities so that we can develop better treatments, and subsequently, cures, " said Randi Hagerman, UC School of Medicine Tsakopoulos-Vismara professor of pediatrics and director of the M.I.N.D. Institute. The walk will begin with registration at 7:30 a.m. at 49th and 50th streets on the UC Medical Center campus. The groundbreaking ceremony will start at 8:30 a.m., concluding with the kickoff of the walk. A celebration at the finish line will feature music, door prizes, activities for children such as face painting and train rides, and refreshments. For information about where to pick up pledge forms, call . The UC M.I.N.D. Institute was founded in 1998 as a unique interdisciplinary organization of parents, community leaders, researchers, clinicians and educators to study and treat autism, fragile X syndrome, dyslexia, attention deficit disorder, Asperger's syndrome and other neurodevelopmental disorders. More information about the institute is available on the Web at http://www.mindinstitute.org/ >>> PROFESSORS, TEACHERS, TRAINERS <<< Autism Continuing Education for Students Now Available ADVISE TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE FEAT Daily Newsletter, NO FEE. http://www.feat.org/FEATNews * * * Mom, Disabled Son Struggle With Rules [by Debra Pickett in the Chicago SunTimes.] http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-welfare26.html There is a hint of a lilting ish brogue in Margaret Ferguson's voice, but mostly she just sounds tired. It is hard to imagine that she is the same impulsive, passionate woman who 30 years ago married an Indiana man because she wanted to come to this country and see the Grand Canyon.Life has not worked out exactly as she'd planned. Now the single mother of a severely disabled child, Ferguson, college-educated, is trading work as a janitor for a break on the Park rent she can't afford. She is also battling to hold on to her monthly welfare income: $212 in public assistance and $150 in food stamps. Since 1996, Ferguson has been cut off from aid twice. Her son, 15-year-old Conlan, who suffers from cerebral palsy, autism, severe asthma and several other problems associated with his premature birth, has lost his medical card once. The Fergusons are among the toughest cases for the newly reformed welfare system to handle. " They just don't want to make any exceptions, " Margaret said. " Everything is really focused on 'you have to go back to work.' " But Ferguson says the demands of her son's care are such that she cannot hold a job. " Even if I could work a couple of hours per day, I could never tell you which, " she said. Although Conlan is a full-time high school student, he frequently needs her during the day, she said. Last year, he missed 40 school days and suffered 52 medical episodes that required her attention. Still, Ferguson has managed to serve as president of the Local School Council and do enough janitorial work in her building to cut her $500 monthly rent to $30. " I am a full-time advocate for my child, " she said. " It's not like I'm just laying up on my behind. " But the system does not recognize her informal barter arrangement as paid work, and Ferguson continues to receive threats from the Illinois Department of Human Services to terminate her benefits. " I get letters all the time, " she said. " You get a letter that you have to come in on Thursday or you'll be terminated for noncompliance, but you don't get it in the mail until the following Monday. ... Or, I got one that said, 'Be dressed for a job interview and no children allowed.' Conlan had a terrible asthma attack that day, and I couldn't leave him. They threatened to terminate me for that. " Recently, Ferguson became one of 1,600 Illinois residents to receive a " needed at home " exemption that is supposed to allow her to continue to care for Conlan without being required to seek paid work.Despite the exemption, the five-year clock instituted by welfare reformers continues to run, counting down to July 2002 when, unless she receives another special dispensation, Margaret Ferguson will permanently lose her assistance payments. Should that happen, she said, she doesn't know what she'll do. " I cannot get another job until I finish the one I'm doing, " she said. " I have to care for my son. " * * * Amygdala: Face and Fear Processing Crossmodal binding of fear in voice and face [Technical abstract. Published online before print August 7, 2001, 10.1073/pnas.171288598; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, Vol. 98, Issue 17, 10006-10010, August 14, 2001.] http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/98/17/10006 R. J. Dolan , ,§, J. S. , and B. de Gelder Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, Institute of Neurology, Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom; Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine, Roland Hill Street, London NW3, United Kingdom; and Tilburg University, PO Box 90038, Tilburg, The Netherlands, and Laboratoire de Neurophysiologie, Universite de Louvain, 54 Avenue Hippocrate, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium Communicated by Mortimer Mishkin, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, June 8, 2001 (received for review September 21, 2000) In social environments, multiple sensory channels are simultaneously engaged in the service of communication. In this experiment, we were concerned with defining the neuronal mechanisms for a perceptual bias in processing simultaneously presented emotional voices and faces. Specifically, we were interested in how bimodal presentation of a fearful voice facilitates recognition of fearful facial expression. By using event-related functional MRI, that crossed sensory modality (visual or auditory) with emotional expression (fearful or happy), we show that perceptual facilitation during face fear processing is expressed through modulation of neuronal responses in the amygdala and the fusiform cortex. These data suggest that the amygdala is important for emotional crossmodal sensory convergence with the associated perceptual bias during fear processing, being mediated by task-related modulation of face-processing regions of fusiform cortex. Copyright © 2001 by the National Academy of Sciences * * * Reader’s Posts I am looking for info on Dr. Walsh at the Phieffer institute. I have two boys with Autism, and was considering his protocol. I feel like I am grasping a straws, but if you know of anyone who has had good results or bad, please let me know. Ackerson ackw@... ****** Anyone been told that their autistic child migt also have a mood disorder (bi-polar) or n our case Uni polar Hypomaniac always happy - unless you want him to work we are taking him off of concerta and the buspar and luvox drugs and beginning MOOD stabilizers - anyone had success with these types of drug traeatments? JMAutism@... ****** Here's a preliminary petition about ADHD/related challenges and SPECT scans for those who may have missed it: Please visit the site and consider voting. http://www.petitiononline.com/adhd/ ****** FREE READER’S POSTS >> Send your posting, no more than 60 words please, to posting@..., no charge. FEAT may refuse or edit any post. << >> DO SOMETHING ABOUT AUTISM NOW << Subscribe, Read, then Forward the FEAT Daily Newsletter. To Subscribe go to www.feat.org/FEATnews No Cost! _______________________________________________________ Lenny Schafer, Editor PhD Ron Sleith Kay Stammers Editor@... Decelie CALENDAR: Guppy events@... 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