| Literature DB >> 31798425 |
Pamela S Douglas1,2.
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are an emergent public health problem, placing significant burden upon the individual, family and health system. ASD are polygenetic spectrum disorders of neural connectome development, in which one or more feedback loops amplify small genetic, structural, or functional variations in the very early development of motor and sensory-motor pathways. These perturbations trigger a 'butterfly effect' of unpredictable cascades of structural and functional imbalances in the global neuronal workspace, resulting in atypical behaviors, social communication, and cognition long-term. The first 100 days post-term are critically neuroplastic and comprise an injury-sensitive developmental window, characterized by a neural biomarker, the persistence of the cortical subplate, and a behavioral biomarker, the crying diathesis. By the time potential diagnostic signs are identified, from 6 months of age, ASD neuropathy is already entrenched. The International Society for Autism Research Special Interest Group has called for pre-emptive intervention, based upon rigorous theoretical frames, and real world translation and evaluation. This paper responds to that call. It synthesizes heterogenous evidence concerning ASD etiologies from both psychosocial and biological research literatures with complexity science and evolutionary biology, to propose a theoretical framework for pre-emptive intervention. This paper hypothesizes that environmental factors resulting from a mismatch between environment of evolutionary adaptedness and culture initiate or perpetuate early motor and sensory-motor lesions, triggering a butterfly effect of multi-directional cascades of atypical developmental in the complex adaptive system of the parent and ASD-susceptible infant. Chronic sympathetic nervous system/hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis hyperarousal and disrupted parent-infant biobehavioral synchrony are the key biologic and behavioral mechanisms perpetuating these atypical developmental cascades. A clinical translation of this evidence is proposed, for application antenatally and in the first 6 months of life, as pre-emptive intervention for ASD.Entities:
Keywords: autism (ASD); complex adaptive systems; environmental factors; intervention; pre-emptive
Year: 2019 PMID: 31798425 PMCID: PMC6877903 DOI: 10.3389/fnint.2019.00066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
Current explanatory models for cry-fuss problems.
| Medical condition | Not supported by evidence ( | |
| (1) ‘Reflux’ or GORD | (1) Anti-secretory medications | |
| (2) Allergy | (2) Maternal elimination diet | |
| (3) Tongue-tie or upper lip-tie (in absence of classic tongue-tie) | (3) Frenotomy | |
| (4) Lactose intolerance | (4) Lactose-free formula | |
| Normal developmental phase ( | Support carer coping. Reassure crying will pass Entrain infant biology with first wave behavioral (FWB) strategies. | Ignores evidence that crying durations are modifiable by infant care practices ( |
| ‘A mysterious disorder of the microbiota-gut-brain axis’ ( | Probiotics | Probiotics may decrease crying in breastfed infants (placebo response 66%) but studies do not control for the breastfeeding problem of functional lactose overload and do not take into account complex bidirectional nature of gut-brain axis (multiple confounders). Gut dysbiosis is a confounder, not a cause ( |
| Neurobiological ( | Neuroprotective Developmental Care, which Integrates lactation and sleep science, neuroscience, brain- gut-microbiota science, evolutionary biology, applied functional contextualism. | Preliminary studies positive ( |
Sleep problems: popular sociocultural and clinical advice which disrupts parent–infant biobehavioral synchrony.
| Teaching self-settling improves infant sleep | ||
| Don’t let baby fall asleep with breastfeed or bottle-feed | Overrides powerful biological cue of sleepiness | |
| Put baby down in cot drowsy but awake, even if baby grizzles and cries for a time | Ignores infant cue; interprets infant cue as ‘resisting sleep’; baby may be crying due to suboptimal sensory-motor nourishment | |
| Create sleep associations with cot, white noise, swaddling, music, low sensory environment | Sleep is under stimulus-control of sleep pressure, not ‘associations’; baby develops negative associations with sleep place and rituals, interpreted as ‘resisting sleep’ | |
| Sleep in quiet dark room during day | Worsened night-waking after 2–3 weeks, due to disruption of circadian clock | |
| Feed-play-sleep cycles make life more manageable for parents | ||
| Don’t let baby fall asleep with breastfeed or bottle-feed | Overrides powerful biological cue of sleepiness | |
| Put baby down in cot drowsy but awake | Baby cries due to suboptimal sensory-motor nourishment, interpreted as ‘resisting sleep’ | |
| Space out feeds | Baby cries due to hunger; Undermines breastfeeding success | |
| Baby needs a lot of sleep for optimal brain development | ||
| Sleep breeds sleep | Worsened night-waking after 2–3 weeks, due to disruption of circadian clock | |
| Achieve ‘second sleep cycle’ during day-time naps | Worsened night-waking after 2–3 weeks, due to disruption of circadian clock | |
| Sleep routines with estimates of time awake and ideal duration of sleep | Baby is expected to spend longer asleep than actually needs, disrupting the biological sleep regulators | |
| Mustn’t let baby get over-tired | ||
| Prescribed list of ‘tired cues’ | Disempowers parents by undermining confidence in their capacity to experiment and learn what they baby is cueing | |
| Put baby down at first ‘tired cue’ | Promotes disruption of the biological sleep regulators, due to disruption of the circadian clock and inadequate sleep pressure | |
| Put baby to bed early at night (6–7 pm) | Promotes disruption of the biological sleep regulators, due to disruption of the circadian clock and inadequate sleep pressure | |
| Mustn’t let baby get overstimulated | ||
| Avoid leaving house or engaging in play or social activity in lead up to sleep times | Baby may be cuing for richer sensory-motor nourishment, not tiredness | |
| Baby who grizzles and cries is ‘resisting’ sleep | Baby may be cuing for richer sensory-motor nourishment, not tiredness |
Cry-fuss problems: popular sociocultural and clinical advice which disrupts parent–infant biobehavioral synchrony compared with Neuroprotective Developmental Care strategies which promote parent–infant biobehavioral synchrony.
| Crying | Poor satiety | Normalize infant distress | Identify and manage underlying breastfeeding problems |
| Crying | Suboptimal sensory-motor stimulation | Teach to self-settle in cot in order to develop autonomous sleep; apply graduated extinction | Educate parents about infant’s biological need for rich sensory-motor nourishment including physical contact |
| Grizzling and crying | Suboptimal sensory-motor stimulation | Overtired or overstimulated; | Use two tools, satiety with milk or satiety of sensory nourishment, to downregulate infant |
| place in low sensory environment; | |||
| avoid eye-contact and interaction; | |||
| teach to self-settle in cot | |||
| Back-arching | Sign of protest | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Use two tools of satiety with milk and satiety of sensory nourishment to downregulate infant; educate parents re appropriate spinal support for infants |
| Writhing, grunting, grizzling when lying in cot | Suboptimal sensory-motor stimulation | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Offer sensory nourishment; educate re dialing up of SNS also activates gut |
Breastfeeding problems: popular sociocultural and clinical advice which disrupts parent-infant biobehavioral synchrony compared with Neuroprotective Developmental Care strategies which promote parent–infant biobehavioral synchrony.
| Difficulty coming onto the breast | Positional instability, breast tissue drag, landing pad encroachment | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Optimize fit and hold to optimize positional stability (gestalt breastfeeding) |
| Back-arching and pulling off at the breast | Positional instability, breast tissue drag, landing pad encroachment | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Optimize fit and hold to optimize positional stability (gestalt breastfeeding) |
| Dialing up at the breast | Positional instability, breast tissue drag, landing pad encroachment | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Optimize fit and hold to optimize positional stability (gestalt breastfeeding) |
| Dialing up whenever approaches breast or during breastfeeding (‘oral aversion’) | Conditioned hyperarousal (dialing up) of SNS, often secondary to positional instability but persisting once fit and hold are corrected | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Comprehensive intervention for conditioned hyperarousal of SNS |
| Marathon feeds or excessively frequent feeds | Poor milk transfer | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Optimize fit and hold to optimize milk transfer (gestalt breastfeeding) |
| Falls asleep at the end of a breastfeed | Normal biological process (↑ parasympathetic nervous system response, ↑ oxytocin, ↑ cholecystokin) | Allows bad habits or sleep associations to develop | Parents educated about healthy function of the biological sleep regulators |
Bottle-feeding problems: popular sociocultural and clinical advice which disrupts parent–infant biobehavioral synchrony compared with Neuroprotective Developmental Care strategies which promote parent–infant biobehavioral synchrony.
| Back-arching and fussing | Positional instability | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Paced bottle-feeding |
| Back-arching and fussing | Does not want more milk; pressure on feeds due to spacing | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Paced bottle-feeding |
| Back-arching and fussing | Conditioned hyperarousal of SNS | Oral ties, oesophagitis, reflux, wind pain or gas, colic, allergy | Paced bottle-feeding, health professional support to build enjoyable feeding associations |