| Literature DB >> 22745707 |
Adrienne L Tierney1, Laurel Gabard-Durnam, Vanessa Vogel-Farley, Helen Tager-Flusberg, Charles A Nelson.
Abstract
Current research suggests that autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by asynchronous neural oscillations. However, it is unclear whether changes in neural oscillations represent an index of the disorder or are shared more broadly among both affected and unaffected family members. Additionally, it remains unclear how early these differences emerge in development and whether they remain constant or change over time. In this study we examined developmental trajectories in spectral power in infants at high- or low-risk for ASD. Spectral power was extracted from resting EEG recorded over frontal regions of the scalp when infants were 6, 9, 12, 18 and 24 months of age. We used multilevel modeling to assess change over time between risk groups in the delta, theta, low alpha, high alpha, beta, and gamma frequency bands. The results indicated that across all bands, spectral power was lower in high-risk infants as compared to low-risk infants at 6-months of age. Furthermore high-risk infants showed different trajectories of change in spectral power in the subsequent developmental window indicating that not only are the patterns of change different, but that group differences are dynamic within the first two years of life. These findings remained the same after removing data from a subset of participants who displayed ASD related behaviors at 24 or 36 months. These differences in the nature of the trajectories of EEG power represent important endophenotypes of ASD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22745707 PMCID: PMC3380047 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0039127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Comparison of infants in the low risk control group (LRC) and the high risk for autism group (HRA) on demographic characteristics.
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| LRC |
| HRA |
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| |
| Infant’s birthweight | 57 | 7.70 lbs (1.18) | 65 | 7.75 lbs (0.98) | −0.25(120) | 0.80 |
| Mother’s age at infant’s birth* | 57 | 33.38 yrs (4.18) | 65 | 35.17 yrs (4.93) | −2.15(120) | 0.03 |
| Father’s age at infant’s birth | 57 | 36.35 yrs (5.16) | 65 | 37.98 yrs (5.34) | −1.69(120) | 0.09 |
| Mother’s education levela | 44 | 6.00 (1.61) | 57 | 5.65 (1.79) | 1.02(99) | 0.31 |
| Father’s education levela | 44 | 5.68 (2.01) | 57 | 5.55 (1.75) | 0.74(99) | 0.46 |
| Household incomeb | 42 | 7.07 (1.96) | 55 | 7.38 (1.43) | −0.90(95) | 0.36 |
(a) Education was reported on a scale of 1–9. (1) some high school; (2) high school graduate; (3) some college; (4) community college or 2 yr degree; (5) 4 yr college degree; (6) some graduate school; (7) master’s degree (8) doctoral degree; (9) professional degree.
(b) Income was reported on a scale of 1–8. (1) less than $15,000; (2) $15,000–25,000; (3) $25,000–35,000; (4) $35,000–45,000; (5) $45,000–55,000; (6) $55,000–65,000; (7) $65,000–75,000 (8)more than $75,000. *Significant at p<0.05.
Amount of data contributed by each group at each age.
| Age (mos) |
| Low Risk Control |
| High Risk Autism |
| 6 | 34 | 47.44 (26.30) | 25 | 39.20 (18.25) |
| 9 | 32 | 53.70 (26.98) | 30 | 49.82 (21.58) |
| 12 | 23 | 46.57 (23.63) | 36 | 43.36 (23.77) |
| 18 | 11 | 53.82 (26.01) | 24 | 52.25 (22.67) |
| 24 | 10 | 60.60 (26.45) | 20 | 48.65 (22.93) |
Amount of data in seconds, standard deviation in parentheses.
Mean standard composite scores on the Mullen Scales of Early Learning MSEL for infants at low and high risk for autism.
| Targeted Age |
| Low Risk Control |
| High Risk Autism |
| 6 mos | 33 | 94.45 (9.42) | 25 | 96.12 (11.04) |
| 12 mos | 23 | 108.78 (14.11) | 34 | 101.18 (15.37) |
| 18 mos | 11 | 107.09 (10.09) | 21 | 94.10 (15.26) |
| 24 mos | 10 | 108.10 (12.75) | 19 | 107.26 (13.00) |
Standard deviation in parentheses.
Indicates significant at p<0.05.
Mean power spectral density for each group for each frequency range at each age collapsed across hemisphere.
| Low Risk Control | High Risk Autism | |
| Delta | ||
| 6 | 7.60 (0.41) | 7.33 (0.47) |
| 9 | 7.76 (0.43) | 7.49 (0.36) |
| 12 | 7.57 (0.39) | 7.43 (0.44) |
| 18 | 7.63 (0.34) | 5.58 (0.36) |
| 24 | 7.59 (0.32) | 7.45 (0.33) |
| Theta | ||
| 6 | 6.69 (0.49) | 6.47 (0.50) |
| 9 | 6.93 (0.45) | 6.61 (0.35) |
| 12 | 6.97 (0.40) | 6.72 (0.51) |
| 18 | 6.93 (0.42) | 6.88 (0.50) |
| 24 | 7.02 (0.54) | 6.65 (0.38) |
| Low Alpha | ||
| 6 | 5.74 (0.47) | 5.53 (0.46) |
| 9 | 6.02 (0.42) | 5.80 (0.40) |
| 12 | 6.39 (0.46) | 6.06 (0.50) |
| 18 | 6.25 (0.44) | 6.21 (0.47) |
| 24 | 6.33 (0.35) | 6.08 (0.43) |
| High Alpha | ||
| 6 | 4.81 (0.49) | 4.54 (0.44) |
| 9 | 4.94 (0.43) | 4.74 (0.36) |
| 12 | 4.96 (0.42) | 4.83 (0.42) |
| 18 | 5.06 (0.42) | 4.92 (0.31) |
| 24 | 5.18 (0.27) | 5.03 (0.38) |
| Beta | ||
| 6 | 4.16 (0.51) | 3.81 (0.41) |
| 9 | 4.29 (0.49) | 4.09 (0.42) |
| 12 | 4.28 (0.42) | 4.07 (0.54) |
| 18 | 4.17 (0.40) | 4.14 (0.42) |
| 24 | 4.71 (0.39) | 4.13 (0.41) |
| Gamma | ||
| 6 | 3.31 (0.59) | 2.97 (0.44) |
| 9 | 3.45 (0.54) | 3.22 (0.48) |
| 12 | 3.38 (0.52) | 3.13 (0.59) |
| 18 | 3.14 (0.39) | 3.13 (0.59) |
| 24 | 3.23 (0.50) | 3.03 (0.49) |
Values presented in natural log of power spectral density. Standard deviation in parentheses.
Estimates of fixed and random effects from individual growth models in which ASD risk predicts initial status and the rate of change in spectral power in infants between 6 and 24 months.
| Parameter | Delta | Theta | Low Alpha | High Alpha | Beta | Gamma | |
| Fixed Effects | |||||||
| Intercept | γ00 | 7.95*** | 7.25*** | 5.88*** | 5.09*** | 4.92*** | 4.34*** |
| Age | γ10 | 0.0004 | 0.052*** | 0.116*** | 0.033*** | 0.022* | −0.012* |
| Age2 | γ20 | −0.002*** | −0.005*** | −0.001** | −0.002** | ||
| ASD Risk | γ01 | −0.220** | −0.300*** | −0.262*** |
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| ASD Risk*Age | γ11 | 0.010* | 0.011∼ | 0.012* | 0.014* | 0.021*** | 0.014∼ |
| Hemisphere | γ02 |
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| 0.037 | 0.131*** | 0.177*** |
| Gender | γ03 |
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| 0.032 |
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| Birthweight | γ04 |
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| Variance Components | |||||||
| σ2 | 0.079*** | 0.100*** | 0.098*** | 0.076*** | 0.092*** | 0.147*** | |
| σ1 2 | 0.096*** | 0.112*** | 0.109*** | 0.099*** | 0.119*** | 0.129*** | |
| σ2 2 | 0.104*** | 0.122*** | 0.118*** | 0.098*** | 0.109*** | 0.108*** | |
∼ p<.10; * p<.05; ** p<.01; *** p<.001.
Figure 1Fitted trajectories of change over time in band power (Low risk control displayed as solid line; High risk for autism displayed as dotted line).
Age (in months) is on the x-axis and the natural log of spectral power (in microvolts squared) is on the y-axis.