UC Davis Center for Mind and Brain, Davis, California.
UC Davis Health MIND Institute, Medical Center, Sacramento, California.
Autism Res. 2019 Aug;12(8):1236-1250. doi: 10.1002/aur.2137. Epub 2019 Jun 3.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), characterized by impairments in social communication and repetitive behaviors, often includes altered responses to sensory inputs as part of its phenotype. The neurobiological basis for altered sensory processing is not well understood. The UC Davis Medical Investigation of Neurodevelopmental Disorders Institute Autism Phenome Project is a longitudinal, multidisciplinary study of young children with ASD and age-matched typically developing (TD) controls. Previous analyses of the magnetic resonance imaging data from this cohort have shown that ∼15% of boys with ASD have disproportionate megalencephaly (DM) or brain size to height ratio, that is 1.5 standard deviations above the TD mean. Here, we investigated electrophysiological responses to auditory stimuli of increasing intensity (50-80 dB) in young toddlers (27-48 months old). Analyses included data from 36 age-matched boys, of which 24 were diagnosed with ASD (12 with and 12 without DM; ASD-DM and ASD-N) and 12 TD controls. We found that the two ASD subgroups differed in their electrophysiological response patterns to sounds of increasing intensity. At early latencies (55-115 ms), ASD-N does not show a loudness-dependent response like TD and ASD-DM, but tends to group intensities by soft vs. loud sounds, suggesting differences in sensory sensitivity in this group. At later latencies (145-195 ms), only the ASD-DM group shows significantly higher amplitudes for loud sounds. Because no similar effects were found in ASD-N and TD groups, this may be related to their altered neuroanatomy. These results contribute to the effort to delineate ASD subgroups and further characterize physiological responses associated with observable phenotypes. Autism Res 2019, 12: 1236-1250. © 2019 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc. LAY SUMMARY: Approximately 15% of boys with ASD have much bigger brains when compared to individuals with typical development. By recording brain waves (electroencephalography) we compared how autistic children, with or without big brains, react to sounds compared to typically developing controls. We found that brain responses in the big-brained group are different from the two other groups, suggesting that they represent a specific autism subgroup.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的特征是社会交流和重复行为受损,通常包括对感觉输入的反应改变,这是其表型的一部分。感觉处理改变的神经生物学基础尚不清楚。加州大学戴维斯分校医学神经发育障碍研究所自闭症表型项目是一项针对自闭症儿童和年龄匹配的典型发育(TD)对照组的纵向多学科研究。对该队列的磁共振成像数据的先前分析表明,大约 15%的自闭症男孩存在不成比例的巨脑(DM)或大脑大小与身高的比例,即比 TD 平均值高 1.5 个标准差。在这里,我们研究了幼儿(27-48 个月)对逐渐增强的听觉刺激的电生理反应(50-80dB)。分析包括 36 名年龄匹配的男孩的数据,其中 24 名被诊断为自闭症(12 名伴有和 12 名不伴有 DM;ASD-DM 和 ASD-N),12 名 TD 对照组。我们发现,这两个 ASD 亚组在其对逐渐增强的声音的电生理反应模式上存在差异。在早期潜伏期(55-115ms),ASD-N 不像 TD 和 ASD-DM 那样表现出响度依赖性反应,而是倾向于将强度分组为软音和响音,表明该组在感觉敏感性上存在差异。在较晚的潜伏期(145-195ms),只有 ASD-DM 组对大声响的振幅明显更高。由于在 ASD-N 和 TD 组中没有发现类似的影响,这可能与他们改变的神经解剖结构有关。这些结果有助于努力描绘 ASD 亚组,并进一步描述与可观察表型相关的生理反应。自闭症研究 2019,12:1236-1250。©2019 自闭症国际研究协会,威利期刊,公司。