| Literature DB >> 28744761 |
Filippo Muratori1,2, Alessandro Tonacci3, Lucia Billeci2, Tiziana Catalucci2, Roberta Igliozzi2, Sara Calderoni1,2, Antonio Narzisi2.
Abstract
Sensory issues are of great interest in ASD diagnosis. However, their investigation is mainly based on external observation (parent reports), with methodological limitations. Unobtrusive olfactory assessment allows studying autism neurosensoriality. Here, 20 male children with high-functioning ASD and 20 matched controls were administered a complete olfactory test battery, assessing olfactory threshold, identification and discrimination. ASD children show lower sensitivity (p = 0.041), lower identification (p = 0.014), and intact odor discrimination (p = 0.199) than controls. Comparing olfactory and clinical scores, a significant correlation was found in ASD between olfactory threshold and the CBCL social problems (p = 0.011) and aggressive behavior (p = 0.012) sub-scales. The pattern featuring peripheral hyposensitivity, high-order difficulties in odor identification and regular subcortical odor discrimination is discussed in light of hypo-priors hypothesis for autism.Entities:
Keywords: Autism; Hypo-priors hypothesis; Olfactory functioning; Sensory processing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28744761 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-017-3250-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257