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Clinical, morphological, and biochemical correlates of head circumference in autism

Authors :
Maurizio Elia
Roberto Sacco
Monica Saccani
Alessandro Frolli
Antonio M. Persico
Cindy Schneider
Carmela Bravaccio
Karl L. Reichelt
Antonella Gritti
Paolo Curatolo
Roberto Militerni
Tiziana Pascucci
C. Lenti
Stefano Puglisi-Allegra
Raun Melmed
Barbara Manzi
Simona Trillo
Sacco, R
Militerni, R
Frolli, A
Bravaccio, Carmela
Gritti, A
Elia, M
Curatolo, P
Manzi, B
Trillo, S
Lenti, C
Saccani, M
Schneider, C
Melmed, R
Reichelt, Kl
Pascucci, T
PUGLISI ALLEGRA, S
Persico, Am
Source :
Biological psychiatry. 62(9)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Head growth rates are often accelerated in autism. This study is aimed at defining the clinical, morphological, and biochemical correlates of head circumference in autistic patients.Fronto-occipital head circumference was measured in 241 nonsyndromic autistic patients, 3 to 16 years old, diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria. We assessed 1) clinical parameters using the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised, Vineland Adaptive Behavioral Scales, intelligence quotient measures, and an ad hoc clinical history questionnaire; 2) height and weight; 3) serotonin (5-HT) blood levels and peptiduria.The distribution of cranial circumference is significantly skewed toward larger head sizes (p.00001). Macrocephaly (i.e., head circumference97th percentile) is generally part of a broader macrosomic endophenotype, characterized by highly significant correlations between head circumference, weight, and height (p.001). A head circumference75th percentile is associated with more impaired adaptive behaviors and with less impairment in IQ measures and motor and verbal language development. Surprisingly, larger head sizes are significantly associated with a positive history of allergic/immune disorders both in the patient and in his/her first-degree relatives.Our study demonstrates the existence of a macrosomic endophenotype in autism and points toward pathogenetic links with immune dysfunctions that we speculate either lead to or are associated with increased cell cycle progression and/or decreased apoptosis.

Details

ISSN :
00063223
Volume :
62
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biological psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....31a592475affff14686112699bc4383c