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The Triad of Impairments Past, Present and Future

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... few children fitting Asperger's criteria were also ... did not fit Kanner's or Asperger's criteria but who had all ... fitting Asperger's criteria 1.7 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Triad of Impairments Past, Present and Future


1
The Triad of ImpairmentsPast, Present and Future
  • Dr Judith Gould
  • Director
  • The NAS Lorna Wing Centre for Autism

2
Development of the Concept of the Autism Spectrum
  • Lotter (1960) in his Middlesex prevalence study,
    used Kanners criteria very strictly applied in a
    total population of children of all levels of
    ability.
  • Wing and Gould (1979), in their Camberwell study,
    looked for any kind of strange behaviour in a
    total population of children identified as having
    any kind of special need. This group was
    selected because virtually all the children
    Lotter identified were known to have special
    needs.
  • A group fitting Kanners criteria were
    identified, with the same prevalence as found by
    Lotter.
  • A few children fitting Aspergers criteria were
    also identified. This group was very small
    because the mainstream children in the area were
    not screened.
  • (continued)

3
Continued
  • There were many more children who did not fit
    Kanners or Aspergers criteria but who had all
    kinds of mixtures of features of these
    syndromes.
  • It was found that impairments of social
    interaction, communication and imagination could
    occur in a very wide range of manifestations.
    But, however they were manifested, there was a
    strong tendency for them to cluster together and
    to be associated with a narrow, repetitive
    pattern of activities. It was very difficult to
    draw neat boundaries between the named
    syndromes and those with the triad of
    impairments who did not fit into a syndrome.
  • The concept of a spectrum of autistic disorders
    fitted the findings better than the categorical
    approach. This does not imply a smooth continuum
    from the most to the least severe. All kinds of
    combinations of features are possible.

4
WING AND GOULD (1979)Camberwell study
  • Group fitting Kanners criteria 4.9 in 10,000
  • Group fitting Aspergers criteria 1.7 in 10,000
  • (mainstream children in the area were not
    screened)
  • Group with mixtures of features 15.4 in 10,000
  • (The groups overlapped with each other.
    Clinical pictures on the borderlines could be
    classified differently by different workers)

5
WING AND GOULD (1979)Camberwell study
  • What held all these groups together was a triad
    of impairments of
  • social interaction
  • communication and
  • imagination.
  • There was a strong tendency for these
    impairments
  • a) to cluster together
  • b) to be associated with a narrow, repetitive
    pattern of activities.

6
  • The triad and the repetitive activities
  • could be shown in a wide range
  • of different ways

7
Social Impairment
  • Different manifestations

Aloof, indifferent Passive Active but odd, bizarre Over-formal, stilted Sociable with 1 person problems with groups ( Kanner Asperger
8
Social Communication Impairment(verbal and
non-verbal)
  • Different manifestations

No communication Communicates own needs Repetitive, one sided Formal, long-winded, literal ( Kanner Asperger)
9
Imagination Impairment
  • Different manifestations

Handles objects for simple sensations Handles objects for practical uses Copies pretend play of others Limited pretend play repetitive, isolated Invents own imaginary world but rigid, stereotyped ( Kanner Asperger
10
Repetitive Activities
  • Different manifestations

Bodily movements Fascination with sensory stimuli Simple, object directed Routines involving objects Routines in space or time Verbal routines Routines related to special skills Intellectual interests ( Kanner Asperger
11
Other Features Often Present With The Triad
  • Untypical patterns of
  • Language comprehension / use
  • Responses to sensory stimuli
  • Movement and posture
  • Attention / level of activity
  • Eating / drinking / sleeping
  • Mood
  • Behaviour

12
Factors Affecting the Clinical Picture
  • The way the triad is manifested
  • Associated features
  • Associated disabilities developmental, physical,
    psychiatric
  • The overall level of ability
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Personality and temperament
  • Environment
  • Education

13
Evidence For A Spectrum
  • Many people show mixtures of features of
    different sub-groups
  • One person can show different features in
    different environments
  • One person can show different features at
    different ages
  • Members of the same family can show different
    features
  • Identical twins or triplets can show different
    features
  • The same basic principles underlie methods of
    education and care for whole spectrum

14
Conditions That May Be Associated With The
Spectrum
  • Attention deficit/hyperactive disorder
  • Tourettes syndrome
  • Developmental receptive language disorder
  • Dyspraxia
  • Dyslexia
  • DAMP syndrome
  • Generalised learning disability
  • Epilepsy
  • Tuberous sclerosis
  • Fragile X
  • Phenylketonuria (untreated)
  • Retts syndrome
  • Williams syndrome
  • Sotos syndrome
  • Cornelia de Lange syndrome
  • Turners syndrome
  • Kleinfelters syndrome
  • Neurofibromatosis
  • Downs syndrome
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • Catatonia / Parkinsonism
  • Psychotic states in response to stress
  • Anxiety
  • Affective disorders
  • Schizophrenia rare
  • Any other developmental, physical or psychiatric
    condition

15
The Importance of the Social Impairment
  • Leo Kanner 1943
  • Present from birth
  • Genetic-
  • We must assume that the children have come into
    the world with innate inability to form the
    usual, biologically provided affective contact
    with people

16
Social Withdrawal
  • Lorna Wing 1964
  • Social withdrawal is an important characteristic
    of autistic children which perhaps is related to
    the inability to communicate in speech. A mother
    often senses this in her child almost from birth.
    Later the mother notices that the child does not
    attract her attention to things going on around
    indeed her child appears oblivious of them
  • This is now referred to as lack of
    joint-referencing.

17
The Social Impairment is the Key to Diagnosis
  • In children and adults with severe or profound
    learning disabilities the level of development
    may be too low for communication and imagination.
  • But, interest in other humans is present
    virtually from the beginning of life.

18
The Social Impairment is the Key to Diagnosis
  • Children and adults with extremely high levels of
    cognitive ability may be verbally articulate with
    good imagination but have learned social skills
    through their intellect rather than by social
    intuition.

19
Revision of the Triad of Impairments
  • Social Interaction
  • Social Communication
  • Social Imagination
  • The Triad is usually associated with repetitive
    patterns of activities

20
  • The reason for selecting social impairment as the
    only defining feature of autism spectrum
    disorders is purely practical and not related to
    any causal theory.

21
Research
  • Neuropathology underlying social impairment
  • Biology of the social instinct
  • Causes
  • Genetic, pre-natal environment, post-natal
    environment
  • Neurological relationships to other conditions
  • Physical Phenylketonuria, Tuberose Sclerosis
  • Developmental ADHD, Tourettes, Dyspraxia
  • Psychiatric Anxiety, Depression, OCD
  • Effective methods of helping and support

22
Change in Thinking
  • Attempts to define sub-groups among autism
    spectrum disorders by behavioural features and
    arbitrary age-based cut-off points related to
    current International Diagnostic Systems.
  • Apart from the lack of the social instinct
    untypical behaviours are found to varying degrees
    in all diagnostic sub-groups, in all
    developmental disorders and to some extent in
    typical development.

23
Dimensions Versus Categories
  • In clinical practice, it is extremely difficult
    to define the boundaries between different
    diagnostic categories, whatever the criteria
    used.
  • The clinical pictures found in those with
    autistic spectrum disorders fit better with the
    concept of multiple dimensions than with the
    concept of separate, definable categories.
  • Individual needs are more accurately assessed
    from the profile of levels on different
    dimensions than from assigning a categorical
    diagnosis.

24
Key Similarities and Methods of Supporting all
People within the Autism Spectrum
  • What can a person with severe learning
    disability and typical autism have in common with
    someone brilliant in a chosen field and whose
    behaviour fits Aspergers descriptions?
  • Everyone with an autism spectrum disorder has a
    number of specific problems in coping with
    everyday life
  • All have difficulties following subtle, unwritten
    rules that govern social life
  • All need other people to communicate with them in
    clear and easily understandable terms
  • All are helped if complex, shifting ideas are
    explained in concrete terms eg with visual
    illustrations
  • All have difficulty comprehending the passage of
    time

25
Continued
  • All have, to varying degrees difficulty working
    out the consequences of their own and other
    peoples actions
  • All need more time than most other people to
    process information
  • All need to be informed clearly in advance with
    careful explanations if plans are changed
  • Difficulties caused by over sensitivity to
    various kinds of sensory input are very common
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