Child has a food allergy if it can be fixed by diet. It is not a fix for autism. |
| OP, my ds is EXACTLY as you describe. I mean everything. We've also gone back and forth in our heads as to whether he could have Aspergers. He's been followed by a developmental ped since a year old who has never mentioned it to us, and he's an ASD expert. I think many other issues, also neurological in nature, are similar in presentation. In fact, I personally believe that there is a 'spectrum on the way to the spectrum' and that's where ds falls. I think that makes some things easier and others harder, like knowing how much school support he will really need (he's in pre-k still) and what we will qualify for. I think when your child sort of lives in the in-between zone of definite Aspergers and not quite sure, all you can do is monitor where they need support and provide it as best you can. |
Well all the more reason to start with diet. Kids react to dyes, preservatives, sugar, gluten etc... In different ways. And the fact that OP's child is not diagnosed with anything means to start with things YOU can change first and log differences. If he changes for the better, than go from there. If he doesnt, it is ruled out. Not every kid with some quirks needs a SN diagnosis. |
This doesn't necessarily sound like ASD. Could be ADHD with a language based learning disability. |
Could be but you can't tell unless you get an evaluation. Adhd is commonly comorbid with Asperger's. My kid with Asperger's who presented similarly to OP's description when he was 4 yrs old has Adhd but no language based learning disabilities. He has no academic issues and has friends. He has troubles with social cues and other nonverbal things like interpreting body language but his eye contact is normal and receptive/expressive language are very superior according to his recent neuropsych eval. The ADHD was not diagnosed until now when he is 7. Previous testing did not show ADHD but we had him tested by a neuropsych whose specialty is Asperger's this time. Since OP's son is 4, a psychoeducational evaluation or ADOS/ADI-R testing will be a good idea. You can request a psychoeducational eval though the school system and these evaluations always include a school observation by the evaluator which is useful for diagnosing Asperger's. |
| OP, he sounds somewhat like my kid who has "almost ADHD" and mild hypotonia and sensory issues. Start treating the symptoms. Have you requested an eval by your school system? That should get you on your way while you wait for the Dev ped. My kid has no repetitive behaviors / restrictive interests so he doesn't fall into the ASd box. He has challenges though! |