Treating Adults with Autism?





 
 




Almost the entire focus of treating autism is targeted at young children; only rarely do you hear about clinical trials involving adults, yet we are often reminded that autism is a lifelong condition.

For those of you that read the proposed guidelines to drug companies developing autism therapies, this issue raised its head again.  Will therapies effective in children be effective in adults (and vice versa)?

There are many issues here.  On the one hand there is great caution about giving drugs to very young children, but there is the realization that many therapies may only be effective if given at an extremely young age.

I only started treating the biological dysfunctions in Monty, now aged 12, when he was 9 years old.  By good fortune the first therapy (bumetanide) I tried was highly effective, otherwise this blog would not exist.

Had that Bumetanide clinical trial been published 5 years earlier, would I have given my then 4 year old son that same drug?  Probably not.

With what I now know, I would be happy to give Bumetanide as soon after birth that autism was even suspected.  (To the trained eye, this is but a few months old)


The effect of no treatment

For three years I have been developing a personalized autism treatment, Monty’s Polypill, and I think it works well, but a few weeks ago we decided to see what happens with no treatment at all.

This did provide some useful insights into treating young adults, as opposed to young children.

The first thing is that all the new skills that have been acquired, at close to neurotypical speed, in the last three years, did not just fade away. 

The old obvious repetitive behaviors/stimming/stereotypy did not return, but more subtle new ones did.  (no NAC)

He could still play his piano nicely with his teacher, but his interest in playing out of lessons faded away as did his skill level out of lessons.

He showed an occasional aversion to doing anything new, for example when his assistant came in the afternoon, I told him to go outside and meet her.  He could happily open the front door (his normal routine) but was not able to walk though it and meet her by the gate.  (no statin)

When I offered to go with him, he had a brief tantrum. 

He started asking permission to do things he knew how to do, which some people saw as a positive.  When lying in bed at 9pm he called out “Mum can I read a book”, rather than just picking one from the shelf by his bed and when at a small birthday party he had to bend down to light the candles, he turned round and said “can I squat?”  Most people thought that was good use of vocabulary, I was thinking “just do it”.  (statin effect)

I received comments like “how patient he is”, or at school  words like “peace” and “peaceful”.  I was thinking how passive he was. (no bumetanide/low dose clonazepam)

While there was no glaring loss of cognitive function and spelling tests and maths test at school were not showing any deficit, I noticed a loss of ability to develop new skills. 

We use an excellent online program called Math Whizz and one thing we were learning was to how to use the calendar.

Typical questions would be:-

“What date is the second Friday in May?”
“What date if the first Monday in December?”
“What day (of the week) is the last day in June?”

You first have to click on “May” to get the calendar to turn to the correct month and then you can figure out the answer.

To my surprise, while still on the Polypill, Monty was getting pretty good at this exercise, on his first attempt.

However, a few days later, when we tried with no Polypill, he was struggling and as the days passed he got worse and worse.  (chloride levels gradually rising?)

There was even a return of the sensory overload that causes many problems for some people with autism and also Asperger’s.  Even the sound of a crow became disturbing.  Both Acetazolamide and Bumetanide are used to treat Hypokalemic Periodic Paralysis, which is a more severe form of Hypokalemic Sensory Overload and at least some types of Autistic Sensory Overload are a subset of this.

After two weeks of Bumetanide and Potassium the sound over-sensitivity has gone again.  It did not go away immediately.


Pleiotropic effect of Verapamil

While I initially identified the calcium channel blocker, Verapamil, as an effective inhibitor of aggression and SIB triggered by allergy/mast cell degranulation, I was once asked if I thought Verapamil might have pleiotropic effects in Monty.  Having stopped using Verapamil and then restarted it, all outside of the problematic allergy season, I have all the proof I need in my n=1 case.  Life is better with a little Verapamil; his calcium channel dysfunction goes beyond those in mast cells.

Verapamil was the last element of the Polypill that I re-started; I was rather hoping it would show no effect outside the allergy season.  Only after adding it back did things really return to what has become our "normal".

There is after all a vast amount of evidence linking calcium ion channel dysfunction and autism.



My Verdict

I think many people would be very happy to have a passive child, who can sit for two hours in restaurant.

Most people do not notice the fading of good behavior, because their overriding concern is the lack of any “bad” behavior.  So a bad behavior is followed by a “is this better?”, rather than a “Wow, do you know Monty did today …”.

I prefer a child who can learn, even if that means he may get fed up from time to time, and show it.

I was pleased to come home earlier this week and find Monty sitting alone playing his piano beautifully (no prompting, no reinforcement needed), with his music book laid out in front of him, playing one melody, turning the page and playing the next one, while his big brother had gone upstairs to play his computer games, because little brother does not need him. 

  

Intervention in Adults

Other than halting self injurious behavior (SIB), I am far from convinced that most people would even notice the difference if you took an adult with classic autism and started to treat him.

At that age, passive and patient is what most caregivers want.

So I see little prospect that “corrective biological therapy” will ever be initiated in many adults with more serious autism;  they will continue to be “tranquilized”.

Many adults with Asperger’s and high IQ do their own research and self-treat; some even read this blog. For them, even a small biological "improvement" can have a welcome effect on well-being. Good for them.



Intervention in Young Children

The best way forward is to intervene immediately after diagnosis.  In the US/Canada that might be two years old, but more like four years old in Europe.


If I was a Roche or Novartis, this would be my target:- non-verbal, non toilet-trained toddlers who make no eye contact, possibly cry a lot and tend to be kept at home.





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