Autism,Its Root cause ...Brain injury in the womb? might be root of the disorder according to new research
A new paper by Dr.
Samuel Wang, a professor at Princeton, argues that damage to the cerebellum in
the womb could be the root of autism
Though most associate
the cerebellum with motor skills, Dr. Wang theorizes it plays a much larger
role in a child's early development
Early brain injury has a
major impact on how a child forms normal social relationships according to Dr.
Wang
Brain injury that occurs in the
womb or early in a child's growth could be the root cause of autism according
to new research.
A paper published just last
month by Dr. Samuel Wang, an associate professor of molecular biology and
neuroscience at Princeton University, argues that damage to the cerebellum
may contribute to autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and other neurodevelopmental
disorders later in life.
The cerebellum, Dr. Wang
theorizes, is responsible for helping young minds process complex sensory
information, which, over time, eventually leads them to form normal social
relationships.
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New research: Damage in the
brain while a child is in the womb may be the root cause of autism according to
a paper published by Dr. Samuel Wang
It is widely believed that
symptoms of the disorder become apparent before a child is
three-years-old.
The cerebellum only makes
up about 10 percent of the brain’s mass, and is mostly in charge of movement-related
functions, such as coordination. Early in a child's life, however, Dr. Wang
makes the argument that the cerebellum has a much larger role, specifically as
it pertains to social development.
'Some of the clinical and
animal-research evidence for cerebellar involvement in autism has been known
for years,' Dr. Wang says in an interview with The Daily Beast.
'But this evidence doesn't fit
into the textbook wisdom that the cerebellum controls sensory processing and
movement. At some level, researchers have been trapped by whatever framework
they learned in college or graduate school.'
The paper gives the example of
a child's response to a parent's smile. There is no reward to a smile, so the
smile itself does not do anything to stimulate the parts of the brain that
respond to rewards.
Over time however, the
cerebellum begins to correlate seeing a parent smile with other rewards, such
as being fed, and connects the areas of the brain that see the smile with
those that signal rewards.
Should, however, a child have
had any damage to the cerebellum in their formative years, they would be unable
to make this connection between that part of the brain that sees the smile and
that which triggers rewards, which would likely impair their social
development.
Early damage to the cerebellum
could also effect other 'downstream' areas of the brain, such as those
responsible for cognition, which would most likely inhibit normal development.
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Findings: Children with
a cerebellar injury at birth have a likelihood of getting an ASD that is
akin to that of a smoker developing lung cancer
For a child known to have a
cerebellar injury at birth, the paper reports an increased relative risk for an
ASD as equivalent to that of a smoker developing lung cancer.
And while Dr. Wang and his
coauthors do not completely rule out injury during a child's early life as a
possible root of this disorder, they feel it is more likely an injury suffered
in the womb that is the cause.
'The research evidence is
consistent with the idea that by birth, nearly all of the risk that leads to
ASD has already occurred,' Dr. Wang says.
'There is certainly the
possibility of postnatal risks, but to my knowledge the evidence for this is
weak, and can usually be explained by some prenatal event.'
Having identified what he
believes to be the root, now Dr. Wang hopes to move on to the next stage, and
find better ways to treat the disorder.
'In the case of autism, the
early-life cerebellum might be a target for future intervention,' he concludes
his paper, which was published in the journal Neuron.
'Autism researchers have been
hacking away at the genetics for years, but genes are a far cry from brain
circuits. There's such a gap between genes and child development. I hope our
article can help bridge that gap.'
Via Dailymail.
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