Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:maternal immune response during pregnancy predicts autism-- hence why i'm being extra neurotic to avoid covid (and anything that may trigger my autoimmune disorder)
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30430410/
The first trimester is crucial for brain development. I had a horrible flare requiring prednisone and the flu at 30 weeks and DC2 is typical.
+1. Had flu with persistent high temperature around week 32-33, DD is healthy and perfect (and really, really smart, but I am biased![]()
Anonymous wrote:Maternal obesity, high blood pressure, gestational diabetes, older sibling with OCD or ADHD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just looked it up for myself. Genetics and parental age play the largest role.
1. Having a close family member with autism.
2. Being an older parent.
3. Having a boy vs having a girl. Boys are 4 times more likely to be diagnosed with autism.
4. Preterm birth.
5. Comorbidities, such as fragile X, Rhett's, tuberous sclerosis.
I have a kid ( girl ) with Autism and it gets very weary reading about how frightened people are having kids with Autism. People with Autism are just regular people who see the world differently than us. They are not monsters.
Perhaps we had number 1 but, I was only 30 when I had her, and she was born on time and she is a girl. Girls have Autism too but, can socially mask it better than boys. I don't have number 5.
Please don't worry about Autism! The people with Autism that had trouble being successful in the past was because we had no therapies for them. Heck, most people didn't even call it that.
And those like my son who don't get diagnosed until its too late to address some of their issues because the doctors, teachers, etc don't believe the mom that there are issues.
Autism is...hard to deal with. Some kids do great with it, but, if you know a kid with autism, you know ONE kid with autism. They're all different, it presents differently in all kids with autism, and not all of them do well.
Yeah. And it's ok to be concerned about the potential for a disability. It doesn't mean you love your child any less.
I have a genetic condition that severely impairs vision in one of my eyes and welp, my daughter inherited it. Can't say I wasn't worried about that. She is getting more targeted, more advanced and earlier treatment than I did, but it still makes me sad that her life will be a little harder.
Anonymous wrote:Just looked it up for myself. Genetics and parental age play the largest role.
1. Having a close family member with autism.
2. Being an older parent.
3. Having a boy vs having a girl. Boys are 4 times more likely to be diagnosed with autism.
4. Preterm birth.
5. Comorbidities, such as fragile X, Rhett's, tuberous sclerosis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just looked it up for myself. Genetics and parental age play the largest role.
1. Having a close family member with autism.
2. Being an older parent.
3. Having a boy vs having a girl. Boys are 4 times more likely to be diagnosed with autism.
4. Preterm birth.
5. Comorbidities, such as fragile X, Rhett's, tuberous sclerosis.
I have a kid ( girl ) with Autism and it gets very weary reading about how frightened people are having kids with Autism. People with Autism are just regular people who see the world differently than us. They are not monsters.
Perhaps we had number 1 but, I was only 30 when I had her, and she was born on time and she is a girl. Girls have Autism too but, can socially mask it better than boys. I don't have number 5.
Please don't worry about Autism! The people with Autism that had trouble being successful in the past was because we had no therapies for them. Heck, most people didn't even call it that.
I’m not afraid of mild-moderate autism, I’m afraid of nonverbal, severe autism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:maternal immune response during pregnancy predicts autism-- hence why i'm being extra neurotic to avoid covid (and anything that may trigger my autoimmune disorder)
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30430410/
The first trimester is crucial for brain development. I had a horrible flare requiring prednisone and the flu at 30 weeks and DC2 is typical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is considered an "older parent?"
30?
35?
40?
and does it matter whether its the mother or father that's "older"?
Read the science.
https://www.spectrumnews.org/news/link-parental-age-autism-explained/
Anonymous wrote:Just looked it up for myself. Genetics and parental age play the largest role.
1. Having a close family member with autism.
2. Being an older parent.
3. Having a boy vs having a girl. Boys are 4 times more likely to be diagnosed with autism.
4. Preterm birth.
5. Comorbidities, such as fragile X, Rhett's, tuberous sclerosis.
Anonymous wrote:maternal immune response during pregnancy predicts autism-- hence why i'm being extra neurotic to avoid covid (and anything that may trigger my autoimmune disorder)
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30430410/
Anonymous wrote:Read Brain Health from Birth. I agree with others, autism is not the end of the world, but I also have a kid with ADHD and sometimes debilitating anxiety and any of these things can add complexity to a family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just looked it up for myself. Genetics and parental age play the largest role.
1. Having a close family member with autism.
2. Being an older parent.
3. Having a boy vs having a girl. Boys are 4 times more likely to be diagnosed with autism.
4. Preterm birth.
5. Comorbidities, such as fragile X, Rhett's, tuberous sclerosis.
I have a kid ( girl ) with Autism and it gets very weary reading about how frightened people are having kids with Autism. People with Autism are just regular people who see the world differently than us. They are not monsters.
Perhaps we had number 1 but, I was only 30 when I had her, and she was born on time and she is a girl. Girls have Autism too but, can socially mask it better than boys. I don't have number 5.
Please don't worry about Autism! The people with Autism that had trouble being successful in the past was because we had no therapies for them. Heck, most people didn't even call it that.
Are you the poster spamming these boards with this message?
Please stop giving such a rosy picture. I’ve BTDT. It’s very hard.
No one is saying the kids are monsters, for God’s sake. But I’m livingvit and it’s VERY HARD.
So shut up.
No I will not shut up. This is a message board and I am allowed to speak. You don't like it? Take your own advice and don't read it. My dd's life isn't perfect but, life is difficult for everyone in different ways. I am sorry you are having a tough time but, it is good to read other people's experiences.
Anonymous wrote:maternal immune response during pregnancy predicts autism-- hence why i'm being extra neurotic to avoid covid (and anything that may trigger my autoimmune disorder)
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30430410/