Brain may grow too fast, too early in autism
Last Updated: 2002-07-22 17:00:16 -0400 (Reuters
Health)
By Merritt McKinney
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Two new reports provide more
evidence that people with autism have slightly enlarged brains in childhood. But
by adolescence, the differences in brain size between people with and without
autism largely disappear, according to the research.
If investigators can figure out what causes the brain to go into overdrive
early in life, it may be possible to develop treatments to prevent this abnormal
development, Dr. Nancy J. Minshew of the University of Pittsburgh in
Pennsylvania told Reuters Health.
Autism, which impairs a person's ability to communicate and form
relationships with other people, usually begins within the first few years of
life. Autism may also affect the ability to respond to sights, sounds and touch.
Though some children with the disorder are mentally impaired, about one third
are "high-functioning," meaning that they have a normal or near-normal IQ.
Although several studies have found that people with autism tend to have
larger-than-average brains, the evidence is not conclusive. Some research has
linked the disorder to abnormalities in several brain regions, including the
hippocampus, amygdala and cerebellum.
In one of two studies published in the July 22nd issue of the journal
Neurology, Minshew and her colleagues measured brain size in autistic
individuals aged 8 to 46 and compared them with similarly aged people who did
not have autism. Among people younger than 12, average brain volume was 5%
larger in autistic individuals. After age 12, however, autistic and normal
participants had similarly sized brains, but the average head circumference was
1% to 2% larger in autistic individuals.
In a second study reported on in the same issue, a team led by Dr. Stephen R.
Dager of the University of Washington in Seattle found that among 3- to
4-year-old children, brain volume was 10% to 13% greater in autistic children
than in normal children and in children who had delayed development but who were
not autistic.
The findings of the two studies are "very significant" for understanding the
causes of autism, according to Minshew.
"They establish that there is a premature overgrowth of the brain in the
first 2 years of life and then brain growth essentially plateaus in autism," she
said. "By adolescence, it is the same as in normal individuals because of brain
growth in the normal population." She noted that the adults with autism had
increased head circumference, suggesting that their brain volume had been larger
when they were children.
What is significant about the findings, Minshew said, is that the increase in
brain growth coincides with the beginning of autism symptoms and "reflects a
disruption of normal brain development." During childhood when the intricate
wiring in the brain must form so that social, language and reasoning skills will
develop, the wiring grows too quickly in a disordered way, she noted.
"It is like all the planes that land at (Chicago's) O'Hare airport in 24
hours landing at the same time," Minshew explained.
Since this developmental process is under the control of genes, the goal of
this type of research, Minshew said, is to define the brain abnormalities as
precisely as possible so that future therapies can be designed that correct the
genetic signal that triggers the overgrowth.
"The hunt is on for the cure, which will be found in the lifetime of children
born today--not in mine--but in theirs if research like this continues its
course," Minshew stated.
In an editorial that accompanies the studies, Dr. Jonathan W. Mink of the
University of Rochester in New York, and Dr. Robert C. McKinstry of Washington
University in St. Louis, Missouri, point out that the increase in brain size in
autistic children "is slight and the volume of autistic brains is within the
normal range of human brain volume."
Although several studies have found that the brains of autistic individuals
differ in size from those of other people, because of the variations in how the
studies were conducted, it is difficult to know whether the findings are due to
actual brain differences or to differences in the study techniques, according to
the editorialists.
SOURCE: Neurology 2002;59:158-159, 175-192.
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