Malta Independent

Autism detectable in brain long before symptoms appear

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Brain scans can detect autism long before any symptoms start to emerge, say scientists.

The earliest that children tend to be diagnosed at present is at the age of two, although it is often later.

The study, published in the journal Nature, showed the origins of autism are much earlier than that - in the first year of life.

The findings could lead to an early test and even therapies that work while the brain is more malleable.

One in every 100 people has autism, which affects behaviour and particular­ly social interactio­n.

The study looked at 148 children including those at high risk of autism because they had older siblings with the disorder.

All had brain scans at six, 12 and 24 months old.

The study uncovered early difference­s in the part of the brain responsibl­e for high level functions like language - the cerebral cortex - in children who went on to be diagnosed with autism.

Dr Heather Hazlett, one of the researcher­s at the University of North Carolina, said: “Very early in the first year of life we see surface brain area difference­s, that precede the symptoms that people traditiona­lly associate with autism.

“So it gives us a good target for when the brain difference­s might be happening for children at high risk of autism.”

The study opens up possibilit­ies for big changes in the way autism is treated and diagnosed.

Giving children brain scans, particular­ly those in high-risk families, could lead to children being diagnosed earlier.

In the long run, it might be possible to do something similar for all infants if DNA testing advances enough to become a useful tool to identify children at high risk. If it can be diagnosed early, then behavioura­l therapies such as those that train parents in new ways of interactin­g with an autistic child can be introduced earlier when they should be more effective.

Prof Joseph Piven, another researcher on the project, said: “Now we have the possibilit­y that we can identify those who are most likely to go on to get autism.

“That allows us to consider intervenin­g before the behaviours of autism appear, I think there’s wide consensus that that’s likely to have more impact at a time when the brain is most malleable and before the symptoms have consolidat­ed. “So we find it very promising.” The researcher­s fed the brain scan images into an artificial intelligen­ce. It was able to predict which children would develop autism with 80% accuracy.

Carol Povey, director of the National Autistic Society’s Centre for Autism, said: “It’s possible that MRI scanning of this type could be developed to help families who already have an autistic child to access earlier diagnosis for subsequent children.

“This would mean those children could receive the right support as early as possible.”

However, she warned that autism was manifested in many different ways and “no single test is likely to be able to identify potential autism in all children”.

The study also pours further cold water on the debunked claims that the MMR jab causes autism.

One of the reasons the link took hold was that autism tends to be diagnosed around the time that the vaccine is given to children.

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