Autism 5 Times More Common Among Low Birth Weight Babies
By Cory Hatch
Babies born with low birth weights are five times more likely than the general population to be diagnosed with some form of autism, new research suggests.
The study is the first in the United States to look at the prevalence of autism diagnoses in the smallest babies. Advances in medical science have helped more lower birth weight babies survive, so the findings could help explain the increase in people diagnosed with autism disorders, the researchers said.
Premature babies are often born with low birth weights, though full-term babies can also have the condition.
Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing and School of Medicine identified 1,105 children who weighed less than 4 pounds, 6.5 ounces (2,000 grams) at birth who were born between Oct. 1, 1984, and July 3, 1989.
Sixteen years later, researchers were able to reach 623 of those children, and used a questionnaire to screen them for autism spectrum disorders.
When 189 of the children turned 21 years old, 60 percent of those who screened positive for an autism spectrum disorder, and 24 percent of those who screened negative, were clinically diagnosed with the condition. All in all, the rate of autism spectrum disorders among the study participants with low birth weights was five times higher than the general population.
Autism Spectrum Disorder Difficulties
People with the disorders have difficulty communicating, difficulty interacting in social situations, and restrictive or repetitive interests, said study co-author Jennifer Pinto-Martin, a researcher with the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing and School of Medicine.
Those with mild autism spectrum disorders, such as people with Asperger's syndrome, "may only want to talk about one subject," Pinto-Martin said. "They're perfectly functional. They can go to college. They can hold a job."
Lower functioning people with autism spectrum disorders may have no social interactions at all. "You may see them sitting in a corner, rocking back and forth," Pinto-Martin said.
Researchers think that brain hemorrhaging or bruising associated with low birth weight or premature babies could explain the higher rate of autism spectrum disorders.
"Our first hypothesis is that it's related to brain development," Pinto-Martin said. "Preemies have something called neonatal brain injury. In some cases, it's just like a bruise and there is really no consequence. In other cases, there is more of a long-term effect."
Medical interventions that keep premature babies alive could also play a role, Pinto-Martin said. "To keep them alive, there is a lot of technology involved," she said. "They have them on machines that help them breathe. They have them on lots of medications."
"The rate of premature birth and premature survival has gone up dramatically," she continued. "It may well be that, because we are better and better at keeping these preemies alive, we are contributing to the increased prevalence of autism."
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