Study Looks at Digestive Problems in Autistic Children
The Autism News | English
One of the biggest concerns in the community of parents whose children have autism is the various gastrointestinal problems that they confront. Some estimates say that as many as 50 percent of children with autism have digestive issues, including food allergies, malabsorption issues and inflammatory bowel disease.
The site for the National Autism Association directs parents to read up on gluten-free and casein-free diets as well as the Specific Carbohydrate Diet (SCD) from the Elaine Gottschall book “Breaking the Vicious Cycle.” The diet theorizes that certain starch and sugar molecules are too large for normal digestion and are harbored in the intestines, where they attract damaging bacteria and fungi.
Clearly, there are no diets, therapies or treatments that guarantee gastrointestinal relief for children with autism. And experts are always careful to point out the lack of hard evidence that autism causes gastrointestinal problems or that GI problems cause autism.
Autism, a developmental disorder, and its link to GI problems can be a highly charged subject, and the medical community is still struggling to understand it. The interesting news out of the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University, though, is that bacteria in the gut of autistic children with GI problems appears to differ from gut bacteria in non-autistic children.
Study results published Jan. 10, 2012, online in mBio® reveal that bacteria from the group Sutterella made up a relatively large proportion of the microorganisms found in 12 out of 23 tissues samples from the digestive tract of autistic children. The microorganisms were not found in any samples from non-autistic children.
A microbiologist quoted on ScienceDaily.com said that Sutterella is not a well-known bacterium, although it has been associated with gastrointestinal diseases below the diaphragm but it is unclear whether it is a pathogen or not.
The findings are significant because digestive problems in autistic children not only can be quite serious, but they can also contribute to behavioral problems, according to an American Society for Microbiology news release.
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