1 / 42

Brian Bonfardin M.D. brianbonf@aol.com Clinical Faculty ETSU Dept. of Psychiatry

ASD: Clinical Applications. Brian Bonfardin M.D. brianbonf@aol.com Clinical Faculty ETSU Dept. of Psychiatry. Objectives. History of DSM and Autism. 1968: DSM II used the label autism to describe childhood schizophrenia . 1980: DSM III included Autism as Infantile Autism.

adriel
Télécharger la présentation

Brian Bonfardin M.D. brianbonf@aol.com Clinical Faculty ETSU Dept. of Psychiatry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ASD: Clinical Applications Brian Bonfardin M.D. brianbonf@aol.com Clinical Faculty ETSU Dept. of Psychiatry

  2. Objectives

  3. History of DSM and Autism • 1968: DSM II used the label autism to describe childhood schizophrenia. • 1980: DSM III included Autism as Infantile Autism. • 1994: DSM IV introduced PDD with 5 subtypes.

  4. Types of PDD • DSM IV labels basically historical labels. • Usefulness and connection of labels were questioned. • Coincided with a new clinical awareness of ASD. • Triggered the “Asperger’s awakening.”

  5. Rhett’s Syndrome • 1966 Andreas Rhett published reports of girls with similar symptoms. • 1983 BengtHagberg introduced Rhett’s to Annals of Neurology. • 1999 Ruthie Amir discovered MECP2 X- linked dominant disorder. • Methyl Cytosine Binding Protein dysregulation.

  6. Rhett’s Syndrome • CerebroatrophicHyperammoneia starts at 6 to 18 months of age. • Hand wringing, washing/clapping movements, head growth stops. • Prone to apnea/hyperventilation. • Limited awareness, seizures and motor loss.

  7. Childhood Disintegrative Disorder (CDD) • 1908 Theodor Heller described dementia infantilis marked by psychosis. • After 2 years normal development abrupt onset of ASD in severe form and loss of motor skills. • Rare cause of ASD.

  8. Kanner’s Autism • 1943 paper Autistic Disturbances of Affective Contact describing 11 children. • 1930 to 1959 directed Johns Hopkins Child Psychiatry. • 1960’s to 1970’s oversaw and edited Journal of Autism.

  9. Classic Autism • Noticeable social problems at 1 year of age. • Plateau or regression at 10 to 30 months. • Core symptoms: social skills, communication, restricted interests. • Subsequent intellectual, sensory and motor disabilities. • Variety of behavioral problems.

  10. PDD NOS • Atypical Autism doesn’t meet all three categories. • Clear causative factor (genetic, sensory, medical). • Later age of onset. • Milder (IQ, motor, sensory) than Classic Autism.

  11. Aspergers Syndrome • 1944 Autistic Psychopaths in Childhood described four “little professors” with mild ASD symptoms. • 1981 Lorna Wing added AS to ASD. • 1991 UtaFrithtranslated original paper adding much to concept.

  12. Epidemiology • “90% of Autism is Genetic.” • Not related to environment. • No clear drug or chemical causes. • Autism 5-10/10,000. • PDD NOS 8-5/10,000. • Aspergers 2-60/10,000. • Total 15-85/10,000. • Prevalence of 1/1000 or greater.

  13. Asperger Explosion • ASD without Intellectual disabilities. • Replaced A Cluster personality disorders. • Represents social impairments. • High Function Autism (HFA) intelligent and odd. • Easiest to assess, study and treat.

  14. Epidemic of Autism • Study found a 230% increase in cases of Autism in CA over the past 10 years. • School systems are providing comprehensive behavioral services for Autism in early childhood.

  15. Broader Autistic Phenotype • Broader Autistic Phenotype is marked by personality qualities seen in families. • Revolves around Asperser's Syndrome. • Aloof, rigid, anxious, social isolated, restricted nonverbal skills. • Deficits in Executive Functions.

  16. Treatment Spectrum • Rarest ASD is genetic/metabolic/medical, most severe (least responsive to treatment). • Mildest ASD is most common and least medical (most responsive to treatment). • In the middle is most typical/classic.

  17. Behavioral Treatments • Behavioral treatments are always the first step prior to any medication. • The three pillars: communication, transitional programs, sensory integration. • Behavioral research has focused mainly on Intensive Behavioral Modification ABA and communication programs.

  18. Communication • Programming addresses one of the core deficits of Autism. • Most training focuses in on picture or symbolic language. • Training is intensive, time consuming and repetitive. • Some research completed: TEACCH, PECS, Lovaas.

  19. Social Skills Training • Social skills training utilizes variety of techniques breaking down complex social behaviors. • Communication training benefits day to day functioning. • Includes social cues, transition rituals, transition objects, and picture cards.

  20. Sensory Integration • Uses a wide variety of stimulation—vestibular, skin, deep touch, massage—to enrich and calm. • May involve cerebellar pathways and ACH/serotonin stimulation to the brain. • Requires training, equipment and usually daily stimulation. • Little research.

  21. Benefits of Early Interventions • Jacobson, et. al, 1998, showed a substantial savings with Early Behavioral Interventions (EBI). • Treatment costs are $30,000 to $40,000 and require 3 years of training. • 30% of patients achieve independent living.

  22. ASD in Remission • Children getting early intensive treatments can lose many symptoms of ASD. • Move into average range in many areas. • Stereotypy, odd movements and social problems continue. • More mild more likely.

  23. ASD in DSM 5 • Little change to original Autism criteria. • Three levels of severity based on social, communication, and rituals/repetitions. • Added language on supports needed. • All historical labels lost.

  24. Social Communication Disorder • Impairment of pragmatics, social uses of verbal and nonverbal communicationand social relationships. • Functional limitations in effective communication, social participation, academic achievement, or occupational performance, alone or in any combination.

  25. SCD • Rule out Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). • Symptoms must be present in early childhood (but may not become fully manifest until social demands exceed limited capacities).

  26. ASD Spectrum • Consistent with clinical practice. • Level of severity of symptoms, medical, behavioral problems and IQ loss. • DSM V criteria based on Kanner’s Autism. • Devoid of genetic/medical causes, qualifiers for IQ, Behavioral or psychiatric symptoms. • No remission concept.

More Related