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About Autism

Signs and Symptoms


The symptoms and characteristics of autism can occur in a variety of combinations, from mild to severe. While autism is defined by a certain set of behaviors, children and adults can exhibit any combination of the behaviors with varying degrees of severity. A child with classic autism may not speak at all, while a child with PDD-NOS or Asperger’s may have a lot of language, but still have difficulty with communication.

Lack of Communication Skills
  • Lack of or delay in developing language

  • Loss of previously developed language

  • Repeats words in place of language (called echolalia)

  • Leads people by the hand in place of asking verbally

Difficulty Relating to Others
  • Lack of eye contact

  • Lack of interest in other children and what other children are doing

  • Lack of response to verbal requests

  • No response when name is called

  • Little or no spontaneous or make believe play

  • Avoidance of physical contact

  • Indifference to others distress or pain

Unusual Behaviors
  • Self-stimulation, spinning, rocking, hand flapping, etc.

  • Inappropriate laughter or tantrums for no apparent reason

  • Inappropriate attachment to objects

  • Can exhibit obsessive compulsive behaviors

  • Repetitive play for extended periods of time

  • Insistence on routine and sameness

  • Difficulty dealing with interruption of routine schedule and change

  • Possible self injury behavior

Differences in Infant Behavior 

Communication

  • Infants without autism may study mother’s face; infants with autism may avoid eye contact

  • Infants without autism are easily stimulated by sounds; infants with autism may seem deaf

  • Infants without autism keep adding to vocabulary and expanding grammatical usage; infants with autism may start developing language, then abruptly stop talking altogether

  • Infants without autism wave hi & bye; infants with autism may not wave

Social Relationships

  • Infants without autism cry when mother leaves the room and are anxious with strangers; infants with autism may act as if they are unaware of the coming and going of others

  • Infants without autism get upset or angry when frustrated; infants with autism may physically attack and injure others without provocation

  • Infants without autism recognize familiar faces and smile; infants with autism may be inaccessible, as if in a shell

  • Infants without autism try to gain joint attention of parent or caregiver to “show” them things; infants with autism may not try to "show" parent or caregiver things

Interaction with Environment

  • Infants without autism move from one engrossing object or activity to another; infants with autism may remain fixated on a single item or activity

  • Infants without autism use purposeful actions to reach or acquire objects; infants with autism may practice repetitive actions like rocking or hand-flapping

  • Infants without autism explore and play with toys; infants with autism may sniff or lick toys

  • IInfants without autism seek pleasure and avoid pain, react when harmed; infants with autism may show little or no sensitivity to pain, and engage in self-mutiliation or seem to overreact to touch

  • Infants without autism point at objects and sounds; infants with autism may not point at objects or sounds

Infants with autism will not always exhibit every symptom of autism – usually there will be a marked absence of the typical milestones with some combination of the autistic traits.


Sources: Autism Society, HelpGuide.org


 
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