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Maternal obesity, diabetes associated with autism, other developmental disorders
EurekAlert! ^ | 9-Apr-2012

Posted on 04/09/2012 1:17:00 PM PDT by neverdem

Public release date: 9-Apr-2012

Contact: Phyllis Brown
phyllis.brown@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
916-734-9023
University of California - Davis Health System

This release is also available in Chinese on EurekAlert! Chinese.

A major study of the relationships between maternal metabolic conditions and the risk that a child will be born with a neurodevelopmental disorder has found strong links between maternal diabetes and obesity and the likelihood of having a child with autism or another developmental disability.

Conducted by researchers affiliated with the UC Davis MIND Institute, the study found that mothers who were obese were 1-2/3 times more likely to have a child with autism as normal-weight mothers without diabetes or hypertension, and were more than twice as likely to have a child with another developmental disorder.

Mothers with diabetes were found to have nearly 2-1/3 times the chance of having a child with developmental delays as healthy mothers. However, the proportion of mothers with diabetes who had a child with autism was higher than in healthy mothers but did not reach statistical significance.

The study also found that the autistic children of diabetic mothers were more disabled -- had greater deficits in language comprehension and production and adaptive communication -- than were the children with autism born to healthy mothers.

However, the children without autism born to diabetic mothers also exhibited impairments in socialization in addition to language comprehension and production, when compared with the non-autistic children of healthy women. Children without autism of mothers with any of the metabolic conditions displayed mild deficits in problem solving, language comprehension and production, motor skills and socialization.

"Over a third of U.S. women in their childbearing years are obese and nearly one-tenth have gestational or type 2 diabetes during pregnancy. Our finding that these maternal conditions may be linked with neurodevelopmental problems in children raises concerns and therefore may have serious public-health implications," said Paula Krakowiak, a biostatician affiliated with the MIND Institute.

The study, "Maternal metabolic conditions and risk for autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders," is published online today in Pediatrics, the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics. Its authors said that it is the first study to examine the associations between neurodevelopmental disorders and maternal metabolic conditions not restricted solely to type 2 or gestational diabetes, including obesity and hypertension, which have similar underlying biological characteristics, and to investigate correlations between these conditions and impairments in the skills and abilities of children in specific developmental domains.

More than 60 percent of U.S. women of childbearing age are overweight, 34 percent are obese, and 16 percent have metabolic syndrome. Nearly 9 percent of U.S. women of childbearing age are diabetic, and more than 1 percent of U.S. pregnancies were complicated by chronic hypertension. In California, where the study was conducted, 1.3 percent of women had type 2 diabetes and 7.4 percent had gestational diabetes.

Autism is characterized by impairments in social interaction, communication deficits and repetitive behaviors and often is accompanied by intellectual disability. An estimated 1 in 110 children born today will be diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, and its incidence appears to be growing. An estimated 1 in 83 U.S. children has another developmental disorder, which includes other disorders resulting in intellectual disability.

The study included 1,004 mother/child pairs from diverse backgrounds enrolled in the Childhood Autism Risks from Genetics and the Environment Study (CHARGE), most of them living in Northern California, with a small subset living in Los Angeles. The children were between 24 and 60 months old, born in California and resided with at least one biological parent who spoke either English or Spanish. There were 517 children who had autism; 172 with other developmental disorders; and 315 were developing normally. The participants were enrolled between January 2003 and June 2010.

The researchers obtained demographic and medical information for the mothers and their children using the CHARGE Study Environmental Exposure Questionnaire, a telephone survey, the study participants' birth files and medical records. The primary metabolic conditions of interest were type 2 diabetes or gestational diabetes.

Women were considered diabetic if the condition was noted in their medical records or if during the telephone surveys they answered yes to the questions "During this pregnancy were you ever told by a physician or nurse that you had gestational diabetes?" or "At any time before you became pregnant were you told by a doctor that you had [type 2] diabetes?" The same wording was used to obtain information about hypertension. BMI was calculated using height and weight prior to pregnancy from medical records or telephone interview.

To confirm the developmental diagnoses of the children with autism researchers used the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADIR) and the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedules (ADOS). All of the children were administered the Mullen Sales of Early Learning and the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales to assess their cognitive and adaptive development. Spanish-speaking children were administered the tests in Spanish. The participants were then divided into groups of children with autism, developmental disability or normal development.

Among children whose mothers were diabetic during their pregnancies, the study found that the percentage of children with autism born to women with type 2 diabetes or gestational diabetes -- 9.3 percent -- or developmental disability -- 11.6 percent -- was higher than the 6.4 percent of children born to women without these metabolic conditions.

Over 20 percent of the mothers of children with autism or other developmental disability were obese, compared with 14 percent of the mothers of normally developing children.

Approximately 29 percent of the children with autism had mothers with a metabolic condition, and nearly 35 percent of the children with another developmental disorder had mothers with metabolic conditions, compared with 19 percent of the normal children had mothers with a metabolic condition.

The study also examined the link between hypertension and autism or developmental disorder. The prevalence of high blood pressure was low for all groups, but more common among mothers of children with autism or developmental disorder, though the finding did not reach statistical significance.

Analyses of the children's cognitive abilities found that, among the children with autism, children of mothers with diabetes exhibited poorer performance on tests of expressive and receptive language and communication skills of everyday living when compared with the children of non-diabetic mothers. And the presence of any metabolic condition was associated with lower scores on all of the tests among children without autism.

The authors note that obesity is a significant risk factor for diabetes and hypertension, and is characterized by increased insulin resistance and chronic inflammation, as are diabetes and hypertension. In diabetic, and possibility pre-diabetic pregnancies, poorly regulated maternal glucose can result in prolonged fetal exposure to elevated maternal glucose levels, which raises fetal insulin production resulting in chronic fetal exposure to high levels of insulin.

Because elevated insulin production requires greater oxygen use this may result in depleted oxygen supply for the fetus. Diabetes also may result in fetal iron deficiency. Both conditions can adversely affect fetal brain development, the authors said.

"The sequence of events related to poorly regulated maternal glucose levels is one potential biological mechanism that may play a role in adverse fetal development in the presence of maternal metabolic conditions," Krakowiak said.

Maternal inflammation, which accompanies metabolic conditions, may also adversely affect fetal development. Certain proteins involved in cell signaling that are produced by cells of the immune system can cross the placenta from the mother to the fetus and disturb brain development.

Other study authors are Cheryl Walker, Alice Baker, Sally Ozonoff and Robin Hansen of the UC Davis MIND Institute and Andrew Bremer of UC Davis and Vanderbilt University.

The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency through the Science to Achieve Results (STAR) program, and the UC Davis MIND Institute.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: autism; diabetes; maternalobesity; obesity; pregnancy; prenataldevelopment
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Maternal Metabolic Conditions and Risk for Autism and Other Neurodevelopmental
1 posted on 04/09/2012 1:17:06 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: Incorrigible

Ping


2 posted on 04/09/2012 1:19:37 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: neverdem

These statistical studies may or may not imply causation.

Let’s postulate that obesity is a marker for lower-class women. There might be many other factors in lower-class households that would also leave to autism. Poor nutrition, excess TV watching, lack of parental attention, etc.


3 posted on 04/09/2012 1:22:11 PM PDT by proxy_user
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To: neverdem

This isn’t going to be well received.


4 posted on 04/09/2012 1:22:24 PM PDT by dangerdoc (see post #6)
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To: neverdem

Much of the recent “autism” is a welfare scam designed to circumvent the five year welfare limit and the end of “cash-for-kids” (by which additional children translate into additional cash). Autism itself is a very real illness; the “autism spectrum” BS is riddled with fraud. I’ve been around children with the alledged condition, and they act like any “only child” who has parents who won’t discipline them. They are very “normal”, and I suspect their parents are fraudsters.

When I heard on the radio that nearly 1 in 50 boys born today has “autism, or is on the autism spectrum” I knew I was vindicated in my skepticism.


5 posted on 04/09/2012 1:23:23 PM PDT by kearnyirish2
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To: proxy_user
Let’s postulate that obesity is a marker for lower-class women. There might be many other factors in lower-class households that would also leave to autism. Poor nutrition,excess TV watching, lack of parental attention, etc.

Perhaps, but my son is severely dyslexic and has suffered from language based developmental delays that are so extreme that he didn't even talk until he was about five years old. His mother (my ex), was not by any measure obese, but she did have gestational diabetes that required hospitalization. She is also very bright with near perfect SATs, and BS, MS, and MBA degrees.

6 posted on 04/09/2012 1:37:43 PM PDT by Labyrinthos
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To: neverdem

Oh, no! Is everything caused by fat folks? How about sun spots? I have news for these people; the way doctors browbeat pregnant women into dieting, what if it is the restricted caloric intake that causes problems? I saw a study recently that said if women are dieting during the time they conceive, their offspring will be more likely to be obese and develop diabetes in the future. The body interprets dieting as starvation and it doesn’t take to it kindly.

Man, I guess the worst crime one can commit in the 21st century is to be overweight by society’s standards. People would rather be with a slim serial killer than a chubby nice person.


7 posted on 04/09/2012 1:39:35 PM PDT by Pining_4_TX ( The state is the great fiction by which everybody seeks to live at the expense of everybody else. ~)
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To: proxy_user
re: Let’s postulate that obesity is a marker for lower-class women.<> First thing I thought. Weight is quickly becoming a class marker, as those with education and advantages find ways to control weight that lower-econ levels do not have or pursue. AAMOF, I think this is part of the hostility towards overweight women that is out of proportion to either kindness or reason.
8 posted on 04/09/2012 1:39:44 PM PDT by Mamzelle
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To: Pining_4_TX
The other issue is that BMI has its limitations. BMI only considers height and weight. That does not factor in bone density and muscle mass. It's possible to have an athletic woman who has more muscle mass and denser bones with a BMI suggesting "overweight" or even "obese" while a woman with more actual body fat has a lower BMI.

If they want to get serious about this type of study, then they need to look at actual body fat percentage, not BMI.

IMO, BMI is overrated and over-used and will go away in the future.

9 posted on 04/09/2012 1:49:17 PM PDT by susannah59
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To: neverdem

A ratio of 1.5 to one doesn’t begin to explain whatever has been going on with autism over the past half century or so, autism existed in 1960 but it was hellishly rare.


10 posted on 04/09/2012 2:06:59 PM PDT by varmintman
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To: neverdem
Remember the days when autism was blamed on the "refrigerator mother"?

Now they're blaming "mother too often in the refrigerator"

Plus ca change....

11 posted on 04/09/2012 2:12:13 PM PDT by lightman (Adjutorium nostrum (+) in nomine Domini--nevertheless, Vote Santorum!)
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To: Pining_4_TX
Oh, no! Is everything caused by fat folks?

Well yes many things are.

Coronary heart disease Type 2 diabetes Cancers (endometrial, breast, and colon) Hypertension (high blood pressure) Dyslipidemia (for example, high total cholesterol or high levels of triglycerides) Stroke Liver and Gallbladder disease Sleep apnea and respiratory problems Osteoarthritis (a degeneration of cartilage and its underlying bone within a joint) Gynecological problems (abnormal menses, infertility) Knee and joint problems Gastric reflux, many forms of psoriasis

12 posted on 04/09/2012 2:15:58 PM PDT by trailhkr1 (All you need to know about Zimmerman, innocent = riots, manslaughter = riots, guilty = riots)
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To: Labyrinthos

But you don’t understand statistical risk.

A statistical correlation does NOT mean a one-to-one correspondence.

Know what I mean?


13 posted on 04/09/2012 2:20:40 PM PDT by fishtank (The denial of original sin is the root of liberalism.)
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To: kearnyirish2

I’m dubious of your conclusion. Do you have any expertise in the field?


14 posted on 04/09/2012 2:30:34 PM PDT by RavenATB ("Destroy the family and you destroy the country!" ~Vladimir Lenin)
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To: neverdem

Once again I’m trying to let people know that most cases of autism are actually lyme disease. Lyme can be passed down from mother to baby. And guess what a big symptom of lyme is.......weight gain!!

So to the scientists, maybe the same bacteria that causes weight gain in the mother also causes the autism symptoms in the baby.

I don’t understand why all the new research showing 90% of kids with autism tested postive with the lyme bacteria isn’t being given wide publicity.

Many children’s symptoms improved dramatically after starting antibiotics. Lyme disease and autism have the same symptoms.


15 posted on 04/09/2012 2:37:21 PM PDT by vickixxxx
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To: proxy_user

I think obesity is more likely to be a precursor or indicator for diabetes more than social class.

My SIL is an MD, not obese (actually tall and slender) but she had gestational diabetes with her first child and he is autistic.


16 posted on 04/09/2012 3:34:22 PM PDT by Valpal1
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To: varmintman
A ratio of 1.5 to one doesn’t begin to explain whatever has been going on with autism over the past half century or so, autism existed in 1960 but it was hellishly rare.

That is what I thought too, I read several paragraphs and thought, "did she take into account that all the kids had vaccinations?"

I know they came out and said vaccinations were not in mercury and were safe but still, we didn't have these problems at this level back when I was a kid.

Misdiagnoses? fraud? that might explain alot, but not all.

17 posted on 04/09/2012 3:41:56 PM PDT by The Bat Lady (BO borrows 1.5 Billion from China to give to the Muslim brotherhood? Where is Congress?)
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To: All


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18 posted on 04/09/2012 3:46:36 PM PDT by musicman (Until I see the REAL Long Form Vault BC, he's just "PRES__ENT" Obama = Without "ID")
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To: RavenATB

“Do you have any expertise in the field?”

Nope, just my lying eyes; any “expert” in these field that believes nearly 1 in 50 male children born today are on the “autism spectrum” is part of the scam, and any lay person that believes it is directly linked to a scamming recipient. Society has to come to terms with the fact that numerous children are raised watching 5+ hours of television daily (”ADD” is the result of children having attention spans the length of a television commercial...literally); false/fabricated illnesses help non-parents dispel their guilt, and make some money at the same time (they receive Social Security for the “afflicted”, with no 5 year limit or even real proof of illness).


19 posted on 04/09/2012 3:53:39 PM PDT by kearnyirish2
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To: vickixxxx

“Lyme disease and autism have the same symptoms.”

I hadn’t heard that before; I think Lyme disease is more nerve-related in terms of joints, while autism is directly linked to the brain end of the nervous system. There is overlap, but I don’t think the symptoms are very similar.


20 posted on 04/09/2012 4:01:10 PM PDT by kearnyirish2
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