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"Healing Autism: No Finer a Cause on the Planet"
Gastrointestinal Abnormalities In Children With Autistic Disorder
Saturday, November 06, 1999
[Study abstract. (Technical language) J Pediatric 1999 Nov;135(5):559-563]
Horvath K, Papadimitriou JC, Rabsztyn A, Drachenberg C, Tildon JT
Departments of Pediatrics and Pathology, University of Maryland School of
Medicine, Baltimore. [Record supplied by publisher]
OBJECTIVES: Our aim was to evaluate the structure and function of the upper
gastrointestinal tract in a group of patients with autism who had gastrointestinal
symptoms.
STUDY DESIGN: Thirty-six children (age: 5.7 +/- 2 years, mean +/- SD) with autistic
disorder underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy with biopsies, intestinal and
pancreatic enzyme analyses, and bacterial and fungal cultures. The most frequent
gastrointestinal complaints were chronicdiarrhea, gaseousness, and abdominal discomfort
and distension.
RESULTS: Histologic examination in these 36 children revealed grade I or II reflux
esophagitis in 25 (69.4%), chronic gastritis in 15, and
chronic duodenitis in 24. The number of Paneth's cells in the duodenal crypts was
significantly elevated in autistic children compared with non-autistic control subjects.
Low intestinal carbohydrate digestive enzyme activity was reported in 21 children (58.3%),
although there was no abnormality found in pancreatic function. Seventy-five percent of
the autistic children (27/36) had an increased pancreatico-biliary fluid output after
intravenous secretin administration. Nineteen of the 21 patients with diarrhea had
significantly higher fluid output than those without diarrhea.
CONCLUSIONS: Unrecognized gastrointestinal disorders, especially reflux esophagitis and
disaccharide malabsorption, may contribute to the behavioral problems of the non-verbal
autistic patients. The observed increase in pancreatico-biliary secretion after secretin
infusion suggests an upregulation of secretin receptors in the pancreas and liver. Further
studies are required to determine the possible association between the brain and
gastrointestinal dysfunctions in children with autistic disorder.
PMID: 10547242