Showing posts with label autism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label autism. Show all posts

Saturday, December 20, 2014

Autism Patients Share Common Pattern Of Brain Inflammation

From Sarah Klein, Senior Editor, Health and Fitness, for the Huffington Post;
While science has yet to pinpoint the exact cause of autism, a new study reveals that the brains of people with the disorder share a common pattern of inflammation from an overactive immune response. 
Johns Hopkins and University of Alabama at Birmingham researchers analyzed data from autopsied brains of 72 people, 32 of whom had autism. In the brains of people with autism, they found genes for inflammation permanently activated in certain cells. The study, published in the online journal Nature Communications on Dec. 10, is the largest so far of gene expression in autism. 
"There are many different ways of getting autism, but we found that they all have the same downstream effect," Dan Arking, Ph.D., an associate professor in the McKusick-Nathans Institute for Genetic Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine said in a statement. "What we don't know is whether this immune response is making things better in the short term and worse in the long term." 
Inflammation is not likely a root cause of autism, but a consequence of a gene mutation, Arking stressed. To better understand inflammation's effects, researchers will want to find out whether treating it makes autism symptoms any better, he said.
Go here to read the rest of the article.  

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Hasbro Creates Online Program for Children With Disabilities

Hasbro, Inc.,  creator of Mr. Potato Head, Play-Doh, Monopoly, and Connect 4, is releasing a series of online videos and other tools to help children with disabilities effectively engage with both toys  and other children.

The project, “ToyBox Tools”, “is designed to help kids learn what each toy is all about, how to put the item together and presents children with alternative ways to engage independently or with peers,” according to an article on DisabilityScoop.com. According to the Hasbro website:
"Hasbro’s fundamental mission is to bring joy and play to children and their families around the world. But for some children play can be challenging. For children with a developmental disability, play isn’t always accessible out of the box, relegating countless toys to the back of the closet or the donation bin. More importantly, the joy and benefits that play can bring, the connection between peers, siblings and other generations may be lost.” 
The initiative, “emerged from employees at Hasbro concerned that kids with developmental disabilities were losing out on valuable opportunities to connect with others through play, the company said.” “Believing that we could do more, a passionate group of Hasbro employees from across the Company, came together to team up with Autism Project – a long term philanthropic partner of the Hasbro Children’s Fund, to figure out a way to help,” said Hasbro’s site. The team, Hasbro said, “learned that many classic Hasbro toys were being widely used by teachers and occupational therapists working in the field and that they were creating their own supportive play tools which provided structure that is critical to the way certain children manipulate concepts to help them understand play.” The program is available online for free, and “Hasbro officials described the effort as a pilot program and said they will continue to refine the tools.” 

See more here

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