Before I return to the science-heavy posts, this is another post to encourage people not just to read about autism, but to treat it. No pseudoscience or great expense is required.
After close to three years of using biology, rather than just behavioral therapy, where have we got to?
Acquiring new skills is effortless for clever typical kids; we have also got one of those. For kids with classic autism, even the most basic skills need to be taught and taught again, until eventually, they might sink in. I do not think this has anything to do with permanent MR/ID (mental retardation/intellectual disability), although I can see why it often gets diagnosed as such; it turns out to be treatable.
In the race to keep up with the typical kids, or at least keep them in sight, we started with ABA and about 1,800 hours a year of 1:1 time with an assistant. After a few years the typical kids had pulled far ahead.
At age 9, I started to correct the underlying dysfunctions, first with Bumetanide, using very recent findings in the scientific literature. This coincided with the decision to change his (neurotypical) peer group at school to those 2-3 years his junior. Time was reset.
We still had the 1,800 hours a year of 1:1 time with an assistant, half at school and half at home.
At age 12, the original peer group is now far out of sight, but after three years we are still keeping up academically with the new “friends at school”.
Monty, now aged 12 with ASD, is in the same small mainstream international school he has attended for eight years. Three years ago I held him back two years, since he was becoming completely “un-includable”. So we went Year 1, Year 2, Year 3 then back to Year 2, then Year 3, Year 4 and now Year 5.
Since most readers are American, where school starts one year later, to convert UK school year to US grade, just subtract one. UK Year 5 = US 4th grade. In the US you finish in 12th Grade whereas in the UK system you finish in Year 13, both typically in your 18th year. (so in the US system, he went K, 1st, 2nd, then 1st, 2nd 3rd and now 4th)
Many kids with autism are now “included” in mainstream education, but in reality some are just having a private 1:1 lesson with their assistant at the back of the class. This is not a good idea; for the last three years Monty has been able to follow the teacher. If you cannot follow the teacher, you really should not be in that class.
We have a new class teacher, an American, he has been teaching for 15 years, but has never had a special needs kid before; that in itself tells you something. Now he has Monty, aged 12 with “treated” classic autism, something he probably will never see again.
After a couple of weeks, his conclusion is “he can read nicely and do the exercises”. This makes it sound rather a non-event. A few short years ago, his school teachers were rather stunned that his 1:1 assistant got him to read very simple words. Now he can read aloud from “chapter books” to the rest of the class.
When they had a spelling test (words like graduate, icicles, sausages) he got 18/20 and one of the new girls in class told her mother how clever Monty is. When told he has “special needs” and an assistant, she replied “special needs … no special needs”. That was nice, but Monty does still have plenty of special needs, but for three years he has been able to move forward academically at a similar rate to his classmates, albeit that they are all 2 years his junior. That progression is quite extraordinary, if you know about outcomes in classic autism.
Having been using ABA for five years prior to starting with the biology/pharmacology, and seen steady but slow progress and so falling ever further behind his peers, I never expected to be here in 2015 with Monty being able to subtract 7,794 from 9,621, or add up 8,756 + 4,326 + 7,832, interpret data from graphs and use x,y coordinates. Until five years ago he did not even attend numeracy/math classes at school, because we had to focus on basic speech, basic reading and things like standing in line and changing shoes.
I have no idea how far he can go. I was expecting by now to again have to repeat a school year, but it has not been necessary.
Behavioral problems (SIB, anxiety, aggression etc.) were generally rooted in biology and have been more than 90% treatable.
With neither behavioral, nor pharmacological intervention, it would not now be a pretty sight.
It is sad that almost nobody treats Classic Autism pharmacologically; there are so many unnecessary, unhappy, consequences, lives sometimes lost to what can be a treatable condition.
It also appears likely that by treating the dysfunctions in Classic Autism, you may avoid the possible later progression to epilepsy/seizures and all the problems that may cause (even SUDEP, drowning etc). This was something we had been warned might develop, but now looks much less likely. For some people, seizures are a bigger issue than their autism. Some data, for those interested:-
This is among the largest studies to date of children with ASD and co-occurring epilepsy. Our sample includes 5,815 participants with ASD, 289 of whom had co-morbid epilepsy. Using statistical modeling in this well-powered sample of patients we have made several important observations about a contemporary group of individuals with ASD and epilepsy. We identified several correlates of epilepsy in children with ASD including older age, lower cognitive and adaptive functioning, poorer language skills, a history of developmental regression, and more severe ASD symptoms. Through multivariate logistic regression we found that only age and cognitive ability were independent predictors of epilepsy.
The average prevalence of epilepsy among children aged 2 to 17 years in our population-based sample, the NSCH, was 12.5%. This estimate is comparable to a recent report of a 15.5% rate of epilepsy in another population-based sample of children with ASD. While the prevalence was 10% or lower in children under 13 years of age, by adolescence it reached 26.2%. Therefore, the best estimate of the cumulative prevalence of epilepsy in ASD through 17 years of age is 26%. Our study replicates findings from prior studies that have followed children with ASD into adolescence/early adulthood and reported epilepsy prevalence rates from 22% to 38%
Note that Classic Autism accounts for about 30% of ASD; it is not hard to guess where you would find most of the 26% with ASD who later develop epilepsy.
Odd epileptiform activity (seen on an EEG), falling short of epilepsy, is common in young children with autism and I think might be considered as pre-epilepsy. Just as someone who has prediabetes has the chance to do something about it, before it progresses to type II diabetes, unusual EEG activity should prompt consideration of a treatable excitatory/inhibitory imbalance.
Conclusion
At least I have treated the only autism case I am responsible for. I encourage others to do the same; it is never too late, even in adulthood. We have one reader, Roger, who got his core biological autism dysfunction diagnosed and treated in adulthood.
If you prefer to wait for 100% FDA-guaranteed solutions, you will wait forever.
If you prefer to wait for 100% FDA-guaranteed solutions, you will wait forever.
Hi Peter,
ReplyDeleteI have read this post a couple of times, it is nice to read about the results and patience/determination with which you are approaching this, gives me and my wife some thing to look up to since our sons diagnosis in May.
Just wanted to know we were able to get bumex, finally gave my son 1mg, started with 0.5 mg for 3 days, his teachers and we noticed that he is smiling at us more, it has been around 10 days, looking more in to face and eyes, and is sitting more on the living room couch than alone at the base of stair well,have you seen similar results with bumex.
Thanks
Bhaskar
Yes, this sounds like your son is a good responder. The bumex makes the child more "present" and aware of his environment. In reality it improves cognitive function, so he will be able to learn more and faster, than would have been the case.
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