| Literature DB >> 23316144 |
Sylvie Goldman1, Paul E Greene.
Abstract
In autism, stereotypies are frequent and disabling, and whether they correspond to a hyperkinetic movement disorder, a homeostatic response aiming at sensory modulation, or a regulator of arousal remains to be established. So far, it has been challenging to distinguish among these different possibilities, not only because of lack of objective and quantitative means to assess stereotypies, but in our opinion also because of the underappreciated diversity of their clinical presentations. Herein, we illustrate the broad spectrum of stereotypies and demonstrate the usefulness of video-assisted clinical observations of children with autism. The clips presented were extracted from play sessions of 129 children with autism disorder. We conclude that compared to widely used questionnaires and interviews, systematic video observations provide a unique means to classify and score precisely the clinical features of stereotypies. We believe this approach will prove useful to both clinicians and researchers as it offers the level of detail from retrievable images necessary to begin to assess effects of age and treatments on stereotypies, and to embark on the type of investigations required to unravel the physiological basis of motor behaviors in autism.Entities:
Keywords: autism; classification; motor stereotypies; variability; video
Year: 2013 PMID: 23316144 PMCID: PMC3539667 DOI: 10.3389/fnint.2012.00121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
Types of stereotypies.
| Face | Grimacing, lips, tongue movements, opening the mouth |
| Head, trunk, shoulders | Head tilting, shaking, nodding; body rocking, bending, crunching; arching the back; shrugging the shoulders |
| Arm/leg | Flapping, crossing the arms on the chest, stamping the feet |
| Hand/finger | Shaking, tapping, waving, clapping, opening-closing, twirling the hand or fingers |
| Hand/finger with object | Shaking, tapping, twirling an object |
| Gait | Pacing, jumping, running, skipping, spinning |
| Self-directed | Covering the ears; mouthing; smelling; rubbing the eyes; tapping the chin; banging the arms against the body; slapping self or an object or surface; touching genitals |
| Visual | Staring at an object or the fingers “out of the corner of the eyes” |
Reproduced with permission from Wiley-Blackwell.