Hello all, I'm new.
Hello all,
I found this site via Google search. I believe I've been misdiagnosed as schizotypal, since I don't have delusions that would prompt that particular label. but I'm fairly certain that I have some form of PDD judging from past history, and that I just didn't explain it well. Also, they didn't fuss a few years ago when I told them I dropped the medicines they had me on, since it didn't help with my complaints and had some nasty side affects. Which I also thought was kinda weird. Them not trying to change them again, or encourage me to take them, that is. Still debating internally if I should go for a second opinion, since I don't feel comfortable, myself, using a label when I might be mistaken. Either way, it's nice that there's experiences here that resemble my own.
Anyway, hello!
Hi welcome to WP!
I was misdiagnosed as Bi Polar. I was on meds, no real change, went off them after a year, 7 years later no psychotic breaks.
I think a lot of mental disorders have overlaps with ASD. And a lot of misdianosis happens, due to the medical profession not recognising milder forms of ASD until very recently, therefore, they struggle to "place" us in a catagory, knowing we do indeed have a problem, but seems to "fit" anything.
I wonder actually if some of the Bi Polar criteria actually are influenced with a bunch of ASD's who have been lumped in with the same condition.
Diagnostics needs to be a tool. They should have a master computer that allows you to on a scale, rate certain traits, and at the end compare your results up to every known syndrome and disorder. Many overlap, it is possible to have more then one too
To me, it sounds like you where misdiagnosed! I would check out this thread:
http://www.wrongplanet.net/modules.php? ... ight=write
Particularly this discription:
Quote:
This is not an exhaustive list of ASD characteristics. However, it's definitely more extensive than the DSM or ICD and hopefully more descriptive, too. It includes a listing of symptoms one may see in ASDs. But please note that not every autistic person is going to display every point on this list nor to a similar degree as the next. This is just a general guideline to some of the underlying issues seen in ASDs.
Quote:
LIST OF COMMON SYMPTOMOLOGY FOR AUTISTIC SPECTRUM DISORDERS:
GABA-related Issues:
1.OCD-like tendencies These symptoms are on a spectrum of their own within ASDs. They can include full-blown OCD issues or milder, undiagnosable symptoms such as preference for routine, difficulty with change, repetitive thought processes, and compulsions which may fall short of the full OCD criteria.
2. Anxiety issues The anxiety can vary wildly from sudden panic attacks to more specific phobias. Social Phobia is a common comorbid, or even a sub-diagnosable social uneasiness. Anxiety can also often focus around the OCD-like issues and involve compulsions and/or obsessive and repetitive thoughts.
3. Obsessions Despite that the DSM and many books imply an autistic person is usually only obsessed with one thing at a given time, the focus should be on the level of the obsession (no matter its duration, what is the quality of its intensity?) and/or whether it us an unusual interest; not the number of obsessions. Also, the duration can be longstanding (years) or even as brief as a single afternoon. The focus should instead be on the intensity and/or abnormality of the obsession, itself, and not the number or duration. ADHD symptoms can often make obsessional interests last shorter than “stereotypical”.
4. Self-stimulatory behaviors In some autistic individuals, this symptom is very extreme; in others, it may be subtle or even solely done in private. Stimulatory behaviors are common to all humans; however, autistics tend to stim more frequently and perhaps may or may not inhibit their stimulatory behavior simply due to social convention. Stimulatory behaviors (or rather an increase in these behaviors) is often triggered by a non-homeostatic emotional state (i.e., anxiety or excitement). However, stimming can also be a sensory-exploration and not simply a method of anxious calming.
5. Hyper- and Hypo-sensory issues These can involve any of the senses: sight, sound, touch, taste, smell, vestibular system (balance), proprioception (joint awareness; limb awareness), exteroception (skin awareness), and interoception (awareness of the inner body: organs such as stomach, bladder, bowel movements, etc.). Vestibular abnormalities, proprioception, exteroception, and interoception all seems to be fairly constant in abnormal functioning (when there is a deficit); however, the level of sensitivity of the five main senses can many times be contingent upon anxiety levels. Many autistics experience a consistent abnormality in several of these senses, but level of severity (i.e., an increase in discomfort) can be effected by anxiety levels.
Body Issues:
6. Coordination, balance, and body awareness Each of these areas can be effected. As stated above, issues in these areas are usually constant in nature and not quite as vulnerable to shifts in GABA functioning.
Cognitive Functioning:
7. Executive Dysfunction Autistics can have varying levels and combinations of EDF. Most have issues with multitasking even to the point that looking and listening can be a difficult task. Social multitasking can be an issue. Common ADHD symptoms are most often noted if not full-blown ADHD. Within this, attentional problems, organization, multitasking, and goal-oriented planning and carrying out of these plans can all be effected. Although each autistic will show varying levels of severity.
8. Language For some autistics, language can be impaired as severely as a complete inability to communicate verbally (either due to a larger language issue or just verbal motor apraxia). For others, language can be less noticeably affected. Prosody may be effected. Some autistics may exhibit monotonic speech, others may prefer to do voices, others still may have an unusual way with words. But this does not discount autistics who, through years of learning, have also come to blend fairly well, language-wise, into the world.
9. Social Issues This is the symptom which is often most obvious to onlookers or during interaction and the reason Autistic Spectrum Disorders have mistakenly been called “social disorders”. Issues in this area can range from very severe to very mild. Most autistics have difficulty in this area, although, as just stated, these difficulties can be very subtle in some and difficulty in this area is not a condemnation to lifelong solitude (many autistic people have friends, are married and have children). As a generalization, males tend to be more seriously effected in this area, especially those with Aspergers or High-Functioning Autism-- although that is not a steadfast rule to diagnose by.
10. Sleep Disturbances Many autistics have issues with sleep. Often it is a difficulty with sleep (i.e., getting to sleep) or staying asleep. This possibly has to do with some of the common serotonin dysfunction in ASDs. Sometimes it can be an OCD-like issue regarding repetitive thoughts and the inability to “wind down”.
11. Talent areas Many autistics seem to have splinter skills, talents, even prodigious talent areas. The areas most noted are: music, art, mathematics, languages, memory, visuo-spatial skills, writing, and analysis of information. Though this list is by no means exhaustive.
Medical Issues:
12. Autoimmune dysfunction More recent research supports the notion that a portion of ASDs may involve an autoimmune component. These immune components can include IgA Deficiency, IgG or IgM Deficiencies, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Hypothyroidism, gastrointestinal issues such as Celiac Disease, Irritable Bowel Syndrome, nondescript gluten allergies, casein allergy, lactose allergy, other sinus-related allergies, and asthma. As further research is performed, other related issues may continue to arise.
Common Comorbids:
13. Common comorbid conditions: ADHD/ADD, OCD, Depression, Central Auditory Processing Disorder, Learning Disabilities including Nonverbal Learning Disorder, Dyslexia and other disorders of written or verbal expression, Tourette's and other Tic Disorders, Bipolar Disorder, Psychosis (most often noted in the teenage or early adult years), Schizophrenia, Epilepsies, various apraxias, Prosopagnosia and other perceptual disorders (e.g., depth perception), various synaesthesias, and a host of others. For some, addictions can also be an issue.
Family Genetics:
14. Family genetics In most ASDs, it seems many genes are involved; therefore, it is likely these characteristics did not arise out of the blue. Like any other phenotypic expression, most often if a child exhibits some characteristic, members within his or her family will express similar characteristics. A “Broader Autistic Phenotype” can often be seen within these families (i.e., Shadow Syndromes). Although in females these expressions may be subtler due to a possible genetic suppression that female-sex-specific genetics may wield, so in looking back on the family the possibility of this sex-specific suppression needs to be kept in mind.
larsenjw92286
Veteran
Joined: 30 Aug 2004
Age: 38
Gender: Male
Posts: 8,062
Location: Seattle, Washington
Hi!
Welcome to Wrongplanet!
I hope you enjoy posting here!
Welcome LemonDemon.
Shop around, see if we fit you better. Don't be surprised if we're nothing quite like you, because we're nothing quite like each other either. (What on Earth am I talking about?)
(I wish that guy Ralph255 would just go away. He confuses me too.)
_________________
"Striking up conversations with strangers is an autistic person's version of extreme sports." Kamran Nazeer
Sorry 'bout the name change, Raph225
Beginning of 2001. For them to have a technique I would have had to take some sort of test to scale for criteria of any kind, and there were no such tests taken. What they used can only have come from what I told them, so I'm guessing what I said wasn't interpreted as I meant it. They asked if I had any immediate relatives with schizophrenia, of which I b'lieve I have two, but they didn't ask about any other diagnoses and I didn't think to give them. My younger sister is diagnosed as As, and I have an uncle I know of that has a severe pdd, but I've never met him as he lives in a group home. I did take a gendered test riddled with stereotypes. I don't think they liked it when I told them what was wrong with it and why, though.
Welcome to WP LemonDemon (brilliant name )
I hope you enjoy being here!
larsenjw92286
Veteran
Joined: 30 Aug 2004
Age: 38
Gender: Male
Posts: 8,062
Location: Seattle, Washington