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Autism is a neurological
disorder that impairs
-
thinking
-
feeling
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social
functioning
It typically appears during the first
3 years of life and can range in severity and symptoms,
from mild to devastatingly severe impairment.
A small study conducted by US-based
researchers is providing preliminary scientific support
to the idea that changes
in diet can improve symptoms in some people with
autism.
Heredity
is thought to play a major role in the disease. Dr. Ted
Kniker has been investigating the theory that poorly degraded
food proteins leak from the gut into the blood, having a
drug-like effect that changes brain activity.
In the first part of his study, Kniker,
of the San Antonio Autistic Treatment Center in Texas, found
that 5 out of 28
children and adults with
autism showed improvements in their symptoms after elimination
of dairy products and wheat glutens from their diets.
In the second part of the study, the
researchers eliminated several other foods, including buckwheat,
soy products, tomato, pork and grapes from the patients'
diets.
Symptoms changed dramatically in 39.3%
of patients during the second phase of the 3-month intervention
period. Eight out of 28 patients showed clear improvements,
as measured by a variety of quantitative scoring methods,
including the Autistic Treatment Evaluation Checklist.
Kniker argues that autism is not usually
a defect in brain development, but is more likely to be
a brain dysfunction
that is secondary to extraneous factors, such as dietary
factors, immune dysfunctions, infections or toxins.
Kniker cautioned that standard behavior
management, psychological and educational approaches to
the treatment of autism will still be necessary, because
improvements in cognition and mood can lead to new stresses
and demands on patients.
In Kniker's previous study, some individuals
who showed improvements in brain function showed deterioration
in behavior, as they found it hard to deal with these dramatic
changes.
Kniker will present his findings at
a meeting in Sicily at the end of June.
Reuters
June 13, 2001
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