Guest guest Posted July 19, 2001 Report Share Posted July 19, 2001 Note: This is from another list. [abmd] etiologic yield in autism, dd, etc. Some of you may recognize the first abstract below from yesterday's feat newsletter. These authors conclude that metabolic studies [beyond looking for fragile X] or neuroimaging on a screening basis is not justified for young children with autistic spectrum disorder. I'm appalled by this conclusion.... yet another validation of the " no need to look for medical answers " for our children beyond the asd label. In order to get a real sense of the validity of their conclusion, it's instructive to look at 2 additional abstracts published by this group. In the GI study below, these researchers determine that " social support can have a favorable impact on psychological distress and, ultimately, can improve health outcomes in patients with IBD. " These findings are based, in part, on patient report of perceived stress changes. Abrahamowicz et al report that " a statistically significant interaction term (p = 0.0171) revealed that the relationship between psychological distress and perceived stress changes depend[ed] on the level of satisfaction with social support. " Well, I'm underwhelmed. The second report is more illuminating. Here we learn that " etiologic yield varied across childhood developmental delay subtypes, and was 44/80 for global developmental delay [GDD] (55%), 13/22 for motor delay [MD] (59.1%), 3/72 for developmental language disorders [DLD] (4.2%), and 1/50 for autistic spectrum disorders [ASD] (2%). For GDD, the presence of historical features or findings on physical examination was associated with greater likelihood for successful etiologic determination with the following items significant in multiple logistic regression analysis; microcephaly, antenatal toxin exposure, focal findings. " Have we no " history " in autism? Have these authors ruled out the possibility of antenatal toxin exposure in autism? One possible conclusion is that the autism sample chosen for this study was rigorously chosen; participants deemed " autistic spectrum disordered " were not also developmentally delayed or language disordered (hmm?). How else can they provide separate etiologic yields for each population? Strange to me, then, that they recommend screening for the Fragile X genotype in autism but against additional metabolic screening. Fragile X syndrome is one of the most common forms of inherited mental retardation. It is caused by the expansion of the CGG trinucleotide repeats in the FMR-1 gene... hence the sole marginally proactive recommendation here that the FMR-1 karyotype be examined. So, that's it... yet another half baked research effort that threatens to limit medical assessment and intervention for individuals diagnosed as autistic. Every one of your asd children deserve a full metabolic screening (can we please move beyond Fragile X?) and at least one neuroimaging assessment in childhood. Keep demanding it! Also leaves me wondering whether more of us shouldn't demand higher standards of reporting " the facts " on feat. Where is the valid biomedical research in autism? LeGendre J Child Neurol 2001 Jul;16(7):509-12 Etiologic yield of autistic spectrum disorders: a prospective study. Shevell MI, Majnemer A, Rosenbaum P, Abrahamowicz M. Department of Neurology/Neurosurgery, McGill University, Montreal, PQ. michael.shevell@... At present, the etiologic yield in community-derived samples of young children with an autistic spectrum disorder is not known. To address this question, all young children (under 5 years of age) referred for an initial assessment to ambulatory pediatric neurology or developmental pediatric clinics at a tertiary university center over an 18-month period for a suspected developmental delay were prospectively identified. Specific diagnostic testing was left to the discretion of the evaluating physician. In all, 50 children with an autistic spectrum disorder were assessed. Detailed history or physical examination was informative with respect to suggesting the possibility of an underlying etiology in a minority (10/50,20%). Genetic studies (FMR-1, karyotype), electroencephalography (EEG), and neuroimaging were carried out in a majority (42/50, 34/50, and 33/50, respectively) of the children, for the most part on a screening rather than an indicated basis (31/42, 34/34, and 28/33, respectively). Etiologic yield was low (1/50, 2%), with only a single child identified with a possible Landau-Kleffner variant on sleep EEG tracing. The results suggest an evaluation paradigm with reference to etiologic determination for young children with autistic spectrum disorder that does not presently justify metabolic or neuroimaging on a screening basis. Recurrence risk and treatment implications, however, suggest that strong consideration be given to genetic (FMR-1, karyotype) testing and EEG study despite a relatively low yield. Brain Dev 2001 Jul;23(4):228-35 Etiologic determination of childhood developmental delay. Shevell MI, Majnemer A, Rosenbaum P, Abrahamowicz M. Department of Neurology/Neurosurgery, McGill University, Quebec, Montreal, Canada To determine the etiologic yield in young children with developmental delay referred to sub-specialty clinics for evaluation. Over an 18-month period, all children less than 5 years of age referred to the ambulatory pediatric neurology or developmental pediatrics clinics of the Montreal Children's Hospital for initial evaluation of a suspected developmental delay were enrolled. Features evident on history or physical examination were determined at intake as were the laboratory tests (and their rationale) requested by the evaluating physicians. Six months post initial assessment, detailed chart review was undertaken to determine if an etiology was found and the basis for such a determination. Bivariate and multivariate logistic regression was used to test for associations between factors present at intake and successful ascertainment of an underlying etiology. Two hundred and twenty-four children met study criteria. Etiologic yield varied across childhood developmental delay subtypes, and was 44/80 for global developmental delay [GDD] (55%), 13/22 for motor delay [MD] (59.1%), 3/72 for developmental language disorders [DLD] (4.2%), and 1/50 for autistic spectrum disorders [ASD] (2%). For GDD, the presence of historical features or findings on physical examination was associated with greater likelihood for successful etiologic determination with the following items significant in multiple logistic regression analysis; microcephaly, antenatal toxin exposure, focal findings. For MD, physical findings or the co-existence of a cerebral palsy symptom complex predicted a successful search for etiology. For both groups, the severity of the delay did not predict etiologic yield. For both groups, a small number of etiologic categories accounted for the majority of diagnoses made. Etiologic yield in childhood developmental delay is largely dependent on the specific developmental delay subtype. Paradigms for systematic evaluation of this common child health problem can be suggested, however they await validation. Am J Gastroenterol 2001 May;96(5):1470-9 Psychological distress, social support, and disease activity in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Sewitch MJ, Abrahamowicz M, Bitton A, Daly D, Wild GE, Cohen A, Katz S, Szego PL, Dobkin PL. Department of Epidemiology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. OBJECTIVES: The objectives of this study were to compare the psychological status of patients in active and inactive disease states, to assess social support, and to identify correlates of psychological distress in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). METHODS: This cross-sectional study was conducted in 200 patients (mean age 36.7 yr [sD = 14.8], 119 [59.5%] female) with long-standing IBD who were seen in tertiary care. Psychosocial assessments included psychological distress (Symptom Checklist-90R), social support (Social Support Questionnaire-6), perceived stress (Perceived Stress Scale-10), and recent minor stressful events (Weekly Stress Inventory). Disease activity was assessed with the Harvey Bradshaw Index. RESULTS: Patients reported higher levels of satisfaction with social support and smaller network sizes compared with normative values. Using multiple linear regression, the independent correlates of psychological distress (p = 0.0001; adjusted R2 = 0.62) were as follows: active disease (p = 0.0234), less time since diagnosis (p = 0.0012), and greater number (p = 0.0001) and impact of stressful events (p = 0.0003). A statistically significant interaction term (p = 0.0171) revealed that the relationship between psychological distress and perceived stress changes depending on the level of satisfaction with social support. For patients with low levels of perceived stress, satisfaction with social support did not affect levels of psychological distress. However, for patients who experienced moderate to high levels of perceived stress, high satisfaction with social support decreased the level of psychological distress. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that strategies aimed at improving social support can have a favorable impact on psychological distress and, ultimately, can improve health outcomes in patients with IBD. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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