Courchesne et al. present data linking autism to an unusual pattern of
brain growth shortly after birth. Infants who later develop autism have a
slightly reduced head circumference at birth, compared to normal infants, but
undergo a rapid spurt in growth during the first two years of life. This growth
spurt is so strong that by the age of 3-4, when behavioral signs of autism are
just beginning to show, autistic children's brains are larger than normal.
The
authors conclude that the causes of autism must therefore lie in factors that
lead first to reduced head circumference in birth and the subsequent the rapid
spurt in brain growth, rather than factors that are not experienced until
behavioral signs of autism are evident, such as exposure to mercury in vaccines.
What did they do? Courchesne et al. compared the
growth patterns of autistic children's heads with those of normal children,
using data from two national studies as reference points. They also compared
measurements of body length and weight. The autistic children had all
participated in a study of their brains using a non-invasive imaging technique
called
magnetic resonance imaging. This provided additional
details about sizes of different parts of the brain.
What did they find? Several highly significant differences
emerged in comparing the autistic children with the reference data sets.
Head circumference at birth was smaller than normal, although
body weight and height were not.
Beginning at 1-2 months of age, the head circumferences of
autistic children began to grow substantially more rapidly than normal
children.
By 6-14 months of age, autistic children's head
circumferences were substantially larger than normal children's. This
persisted through the age of 3-4 years.
The
graph to the right compares the relative head sizes of autistic and
normal children. It shows how much larger or smaller an autistic
child's head circumference would be than the average size of a
normal child's head at different ages.
At
birth, autistic children's head circumference is significantly
smaller. A rapid spurt of growth starts soon thereafter, so that by
age 6-14 months, the head circumference is significantly larger.
Significance levels shown for points that differ significantly from
normal.
Adapted from Courchesne et al.
Using their MRI observations, Courchesne et al discovered that the
certain brain structures and tissues differed in relation to head circumference
and the spurt in growth of head size. For example, smaller head circumference at
birth was correlated with smaller amounts of gray tissue in the cerebellum in
childhood. Infants that underwent rapid increases in head circumference were
more likely to have larger amounts of cerebral gray tissue. Larger head
circumference at 6-14 mo age was associated with larger amounts of cerebral gray
and white matter, whole brain gray and white matter, and whole brain volumes.
In
another important observation, the authors noted that children diagnosed with
more pronounced autism underwent more rapid
increases in head circumference before 6-14 mo age than children diagnosed with
a milder form of autism (known to specialists as
PDD-NOS).
What does it mean? This study confirms that biological evidence
of autism can be found in the brains of autistic children before behavioral
indications are apparent, and the first signs are evident at birth. According to
the authors, this indicates that factors experienced by children at the age when
they begin to show behavioral signs of autism are unlikely to be the cause of
the disorder, for example mercury in vaccines. The authors acknowledge that
events/exposures during childhood may be important as aggravating factors, but
they can't be responsible for its basic causation. The abnormally high rates of
brain growth they observed were seen in only 6% of nonautistic cases but in 59%
of autistic cases.
One
variation on their interpretation would be that the high rates of brain growth
from birth to 2 years of age are necessary antecedants of autism, but that an
additional trigger is essential to inducing the actual expression of autism.
Thus children that did not undergo the brain growth spurt would not be
vulnerable to exposure to the trigger, whereas those that had would develop
autism, once exposed to the trigger. Hence a possible role for exposures during
childhood cannot be ruled out on the basis of these observations.
Even
if these observations do not rule out contributions during childhood, they
clearly emphasize the need to understand what factors may be causing autistic
children to have smaller head circumference at birth and then undergo rapid
increases in brain size over the first 2 years of life.
Several contaminants that affect the pace and pattern of brain development in
animals, or interfere with mechanisms controlling brain development, have become
increasingly widespread in humans over the past two decades, over the same
period that autism has become more common:
Perchlorate disrupts the action of thyroid in directing brain
development. This contaminant is now in the drinking water of over 20
million people in the US.
Polybrominated flame retardants have been found to alter the
brain growth spurt in mice; PBDE levels have increased exponential in
Americans over the past 20 years.
Bisphenol A activates genes involved in regulating brain
growth. Exposure to bisphenol A has become ubiquitous as a result of its
use to make polycarbonate plastic.
With
these clear results from Courchesne et al. showing that brain growth
patterns in the womb and postnatally differ in autistic children, work on
possible contributions by contaminants interfering with brain development is now
warranted.
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