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Parents of children with autism were roughly twice as likely to have
been hospitalized for a mental disorder, such as schizophrenia, than
parents of other children, according to an analysis of Swedish birth
and hospital records by a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
researcher and colleagues in the U.S. and Europe.
The study, “Parental psychiatric disorders associated with autism
spectrum disorders in the offspring,” appears in the May 5, 2008, issue
of the journal Pediatrics.
“We are trying to determine whether
autism is more common among families with other psychiatric disorders.
Establishing an association between autism and other psychiatric
disorders might enable future investigators to better focus on genetic
and environmental factors that might be shared among these disorders,”
said study author Julie Daniels, PhD, an assistant professor in the
UNC School of Public Health’s epidemiology and maternal and child
health departments.
“Earlier studies have shown a higher rate
of psychiatric disorders in families of autistic children than in the
general population,” she said. “We wanted to see if the parents of
autistic children were more likely to be diagnosed with mental
disorders.
“Our research shows that mothers and fathers
diagnosed with schizophrenia were about twice as likely to have a child
diagnosed with autism. We also saw higher rates of depression and
personality disorders among mothers, but not fathers,” Daniels said.
This
information will help researchers look among related diseases, such as
psychiatric disorders, for causes of autism, Daniels said. “It may
eventually help identify opportunities to prevent or treat the
disorder.”
The study examined 1,237 children born between 1977
and 2003 who were diagnosed with autism before age 10, and compared
them with 30,925 control subjects matched for gender, year of birth and
hospital. The large sample size enabled researchers to distinguish
between psychiatric histories of mothers versus fathers in relation to
autism. The association was present regardless of the timing of the
parent’s diagnosis relative to the child’s diagnosis.
Coauthors
of the study include Ulla Forssen, PhD, GlaxoSmithKline
epidemiologist, Collegeville, Pa.; Christina Hultman, PhD, Sven
Cnattingius, MD, PhD, and Par Sparen, PhD, all of the department
of medical epidemiology and biostatistics at the Karolinska Institutet,
Stockholm, Sweden; David Savitz, PhD, director of the Center of
Excellence in Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Disease Prevention, Mt.
Sinai School of Medicine, New York; and Maria Feychting, PhD,
Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm,
Sweden.
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