Division of Developmental Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Research Institute in Developmental Medicine, Johannes Kepler University, Linz, Austria.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2019 May;40(4):312-314. doi: 10.1097/DBP.0000000000000674.
Peter is a 26-year-old group home resident in Austria with a history of poor peer relationships, including being bullied, and previous diagnoses of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, Asperger syndrome, social anxiety, depression, and developmental coordination disorder. Consultation from our international neurodevelopmental team was requested for severe anxiety and avoidance of social interactions. He reported 4 or more spontaneous anxiety episodes per day. Anxiety triggers included returning to his group home from his vocational rehabilitation program each evening or returning to the group home after weekends at his parents' house. Each Sunday evening, in anticipation of returning to the group home, Peter engaged in tantrums, including screaming and throwing objects and suicidal threats without intent, but not direct aggression toward family members. He phoned his mother several times per day on weekdays.Peter's early history was significant for hyperactivity, impulsivity, aggression, and socially intrusive behavior; he repeated kindergarten and by first grade was characterized as motorically clumsy and "too much in [peers'] personal space." He played alone in kindergarten and had poor social boundaries; when older, he evidenced reduced social perception, and his family reported he did not notice when peers made fun of him. His language developed normally, but he had a "sophisticated style of speaking" and as an adult continued to have trouble understanding gestures, jokes, and social themes in movies.Between ages 7 and 11 years, Peter had been bullied and ostracized by male peers but did well academically, always got along well with adults, and preferred to play with girls. Exclusion by peers persisted through high school, at which time his independent functioning declined and he required his mother's assistance with organizing his materials. At age 15 years, Peter repeated a grade so that he could change classmates, and by the equivalent of his junior year, his grades deteriorated. He had several psychiatric admissions for depression and destructive outbursts (to avoid going to school) and was diagnosed with Asperger disorder. At age 18 years, Peter refused to return to school. He lived at home with his parents, only leaving the house to accompany them on errands, until placed in a group home for people with mental health disorders at age 20 years. At age 26 years, he is sharing a supported-living apartment with 2 young adults with chronic psychiatric disorders. He works in 3 highly structured sheltered workshops for a few hours each and becomes easily overwhelmed in unstructured situations and/or in situations in which he anticipates being reprimanded or letting someone down. Despite a strong interest in marine biology, anxiety prevents him from considering college.How would you proceed with diagnostic testing or intervention to help this young man?
彼得是一名 26 岁的奥地利寄宿之家居民,他曾有过不良的同伴关系史,包括被欺负,以及之前被诊断患有注意缺陷多动障碍、阿斯伯格综合征、社交焦虑症、抑郁症和发育性协调障碍。由于严重的焦虑和回避社交互动,他请求我们的国际神经发育团队进行咨询。他报告每天有 4 次或更多自发性焦虑发作。焦虑触发因素包括每天晚上从职业康复计划返回寄宿之家,或周末在父母家返回寄宿之家。每个星期天晚上,彼得在回到寄宿之家之前都会发脾气,包括尖叫、扔东西和威胁自杀,但不是直接针对家人。他在工作日每天给母亲打几次电话。彼得的早期病史显著表现为多动、冲动、攻击性和社交侵入性行为;他重读了幼儿园,到一年级时,他被描述为运动笨拙,“太过于关注[同伴]的个人空间”。他在幼儿园独自玩耍,社交界限很差;长大后,他的社交感知能力下降,他的家人报告说,当同龄人嘲笑他时,他没有注意到。他的语言发育正常,但他有一种“复杂的说话风格”,成年后仍难以理解手势、笑话和电影中的社交主题。在 7 岁至 11 岁之间,彼得曾被男同学欺负和排斥,但学业成绩优异,总是与成年人相处融洽,更喜欢与女孩玩耍。到高中时,他仍然被同龄人排斥,此时他的独立能力下降,需要母亲帮助整理他的材料。15 岁时,彼得重读了一个年级,以便换班,到了相当于高中三年级时,他的成绩恶化了。他因抑郁和破坏性爆发(为了避免上学)而多次住院,被诊断为阿斯伯格障碍。18 岁时,彼得拒绝返校。他和父母住在一起,除了陪他们外出办事外,他很少出门,直到 20 岁时被安置在一个心理健康障碍的寄宿之家。26 岁时,他与两名患有慢性精神疾病的年轻成年人一起住在一个支持性的生活公寓里。他在 3 个高度结构化的庇护性工作坊工作几个小时,但在非结构化的情况下,或在他预计会受到斥责或让某人失望的情况下,他会感到不知所措。尽管他对海洋生物学很感兴趣,但焦虑使他无法考虑上大学。你将如何进行诊断测试或干预来帮助这个年轻人?