Page 1 of 1 [ 11 posts ] 

Eloa
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jun 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,223

12 Feb 2013, 7:17 pm

First I got diagnosed with Aspergers but it got changed into Autistic Disorder later, as my parents remembered after the first diagnosis that I regressed in speech age two years old.
I did not talk until 1.5 years at all and then started to speak and at age 2 I regressed to being non-verbal again.
I regained speech age 4/5, but I never spoke a lot and still do not speak a lot (mutism).
Some people I am very familiar with I can speak some more to than to people I don't know or only know a little where I mute.
Is it typical for Aspergers or is it typical for classis autism or is it typical for PDD-NOS?
I had a great delay in overall development and self-help-skills and still do.
I cannot live independantly and can only do little work for people who know I am autistic and take it into account.


_________________
English is not my native language, so I will very likely do mistakes in writing or understanding. My edits are due to corrections of mistakes, which I sometimes recognize just after submitting a text.


AardvarkGoodSwimmer
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Apr 2009
Age: 62
Gender: Male
Posts: 7,665
Location: Houston, Texas

12 Feb 2013, 11:27 pm

Hi, well, first off, you write pretty well for someone who speaks English as a second language. I mean, certainly better than I'd write Spanish, the only other language besides English that I'm a little familiar with.

I think in general a period of language regression is more likely a part of classic autism.

And I do wonder if in some cases children regress because parents stress too much and invest too much emotion when the child does speak.



Eloa
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jun 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,223

13 Feb 2013, 3:39 pm

I learn a lot regarding the English language from reading in this forum, it is a big help.
I look up all the words I don't know and I use linguee for it.
It's an online dictionary.
My partner identifies with the Broader Autism Phenotype and he does have traits.
He regressed from normally speaking until age 6 into very severe stuttering and there was no physical cause found.
Now he stutters still a little bit.
He wonders if his stuttering is the cause of his autistic traits or if he regressed because of having autistic traits.
Could there be any correlation to regress into stuttering having autistic traits as defined in BAP?


_________________
English is not my native language, so I will very likely do mistakes in writing or understanding. My edits are due to corrections of mistakes, which I sometimes recognize just after submitting a text.


LupaLuna
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 14 Jan 2013
Age: 54
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,551
Location: tri-cities WA

13 Feb 2013, 3:51 pm

Eloa wrote:
I learn a lot regarding the English language from reading in this forum, it is a big help.
I look up all the words I don't know and I use linguee for it.
It's an online dictionary.
My partner identifies with the Broader Autism Phenotype and he does have traits.
He regressed from normally speaking until age 6 into very severe stuttering and there was no physical cause found.
Now he stutters still a little bit.
He wonders if his stuttering is the cause of his autistic traits or if he regressed because of having autistic traits.
Could there be any correlation to regress into stuttering having autistic traits as defined in BAP?


Gotta love Wikipedia! Don't know what a word is? copy and paste into Wikipedia. Read article. Five minutes later. Learned a new word. Sure beats school and them stupid teachers.



btbnnyr
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 18 May 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 7,359
Location: Lost Angleles Carmen Santiago

13 Feb 2013, 4:03 pm

Regressive autism might be its own subtype. Regressive autism is most associated with big brain size during an early developmental period. Study has shown that big brain growth occurs months before the behavioral regressions become obvious.



Eloa
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jun 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,223

13 Feb 2013, 4:03 pm

First I need to translate the English language words into native language words and then into pictures to make sense and then into Wikipedian-explanation if necessarily needed or from pictures into native language words into English language words.


_________________
English is not my native language, so I will very likely do mistakes in writing or understanding. My edits are due to corrections of mistakes, which I sometimes recognize just after submitting a text.


Moriel
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

User avatar

Joined: 1 Feb 2013
Age: 27
Gender: Female
Posts: 47
Location: California

13 Feb 2013, 4:18 pm

Eloa wrote:
First I got diagnosed with Aspergers but it got changed into Autistic Disorder later, as my parents remembered after the first diagnosis that I regressed in speech age two years old.
I did not talk until 1.5 years at all and then started to speak and at age 2 I regressed to being non-verbal again.
I regained speech age 4/5, but I never spoke a lot and still do not speak a lot (mutism).
Some people I am very familiar with I can speak some more to than to people I don't know or only know a little where I mute.
Is it typical for Aspergers or is it typical for classis autism or is it typical for PDD-NOS?
I had a great delay in overall development and self-help-skills and still do.
I cannot live independantly and can only do little work for people who know I am autistic and take it into account.


Have you ever had an EEG? My son belongs to the "regressive phenotype" (regressed at age 1.5) and is currently non-verbal. He was diagnosed with epilepsy (although he never had a myoclonic sizure) and is on antiepileptics. His receptive language has improved a lot, although he's not talking.

The pattern found on his EEG were 2-3 hz slow spike-wave on the left centro-temporal area in his brain.


_________________
Me: NT (English is not my native language)
Son: 5 yrs-old diagnosed with PDD-NOS and LKS
Husband: Undiagnosed Asperger's


LupaLuna
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 14 Jan 2013
Age: 54
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,551
Location: tri-cities WA

13 Feb 2013, 4:19 pm

Eloa wrote:
First I need to translate the English language words into native language words and then into pictures to make sense and then into Wikipedian-explanation if necessarily needed or from pictures into native language words into English language words.


You know. For all the steps you gotta go through. You do a reality damn good job at it. I'm impressed.



Eloa
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jun 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,223

13 Feb 2013, 4:20 pm

btbnnyr wrote:
Regressive autism might be its own subtype. Regressive autism is most associated with big brain size during an early developmental period. Study has shown that big brain growth occurs months before the behavioral regressions become obvious.

This is interesting and I will do research on it.
The first - but I don't know to call it regression as not being regressed but absent - was not connecting to food right from birth and making no contact to parents or people.
There a no photos existing from childhood where I look at people or turn to people or look into a camera.
Age 4/5 I got fixated to stare at a camera 8O until entering school.
On photos from school I lost the stare and was back absent.


_________________
English is not my native language, so I will very likely do mistakes in writing or understanding. My edits are due to corrections of mistakes, which I sometimes recognize just after submitting a text.


Eloa
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jun 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,223

13 Feb 2013, 4:22 pm

Moriel wrote:
Eloa wrote:
First I got diagnosed with Aspergers but it got changed into Autistic Disorder later, as my parents remembered after the first diagnosis that I regressed in speech age two years old.
I did not talk until 1.5 years at all and then started to speak and at age 2 I regressed to being non-verbal again.
I regained speech age 4/5, but I never spoke a lot and still do not speak a lot (mutism).
Some people I am very familiar with I can speak some more to than to people I don't know or only know a little where I mute.
Is it typical for Aspergers or is it typical for classis autism or is it typical for PDD-NOS?
I had a great delay in overall development and self-help-skills and still do.
I cannot live independantly and can only do little work for people who know I am autistic and take it into account.


Have you ever had an EEG? My son belongs to the "regressive phenotype" (regressed at age 1.5) and is currently non-verbal. He was diagnosed with epilepsy (although he never had a myoclonic sizure) and is on antiepileptics. His receptive language has improved a lot, although he's not talking.

The pattern found on his EEG were 2-3 hz slow spike-wave on the left centro-temporal area in his brain.


No epilepsy with me.


_________________
English is not my native language, so I will very likely do mistakes in writing or understanding. My edits are due to corrections of mistakes, which I sometimes recognize just after submitting a text.


Moriel
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

User avatar

Joined: 1 Feb 2013
Age: 27
Gender: Female
Posts: 47
Location: California

13 Feb 2013, 4:24 pm

btbnnyr wrote:
Regressive autism might be its own subtype. Regressive autism is most associated with big brain size during an early developmental period. Study has shown that big brain growth occurs months before the behavioral regressions become obvious.


Indeed, my son was on the 90th percentile just before the regression.


_________________
Me: NT (English is not my native language)
Son: 5 yrs-old diagnosed with PDD-NOS and LKS
Husband: Undiagnosed Asperger's