AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how emotional dysregulation (ED) affects adaptive functioning in preschoolers diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or other neurodevelopmental disorders.
  • The research involved assessing 100 children, focusing on their emotional, behavioral, and developmental profiles, with particular attention to how these factors interplay with their ability to function effectively in daily life.
  • Results indicate that higher levels of ED, along with severity of autism symptoms and global developmental delay, are linked to poorer adaptive functioning, highlighting ED's role as an important factor in the clinical evaluation of young children with ASD.

Article Abstract

Aim: Emotional dysregulation (ED), defined by deficits in the ability to monitor and modulate the valence, intensity, and expression of emotions, is typically expressed with irritability, tantrums, mood fluctuations, and self-harm in young children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Although ED does not represent a diagnostic feature of ASD, its manifestations are an important contributor to functional impairment and clinical referral. This study aims to examine the relationship between ED and adaptive functioning in preschoolers clinically referred for ASD or other neurodevelopmental disorders.

Methods: A sample of 100 children (74% males, mean age 39.4 ± 12.3 months), consecutively referred to a university clinic for neurodevelopmental disorders, received clinical assessments of psychopathology with the CBCL and the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised, of ED- with the CBCL-Attention, Anxious/Depressed, and Aggression index (CBCL-AAA), of autism symptom severity with the ADOS-2 Calibrated Severity Score (ADOS-CSS), and of global developmental/cognitive delay (GDD) with the WPPSI-IV or other age-appropriate standardized scales. Adaptive functioning was measured with the ABAS-II. Sixty-five children met DSM-5 criteria for ASD. Multivariate regression models were applied to evaluate the relative contribution of ED, ASD severity and GDD to the ABAS-II general (GAC), conceptual (CAD), social (SAD), and practical (PAD) adaptive functioning domains.

Results: Overall ( = 100), lower adaptive functioning was associated with higher CBCL-AAA ( = 0.003), higher ADOS-CSS (p < 0.001), and presence of GDD ( = 0.023). In the ASD group ( = 65), worse CAD was predicted by GDD ( = 0.016), and worse SAD and PAD by higher ADOS-CSS ( = 0.032) and ED ( = 0.002). No sex differences were detected in the study variables.

Conclusion: Together with the severity of global developmental delay and of autism symptoms, ED is a significant contributor to impairment in adaptive functioning among young children with a neurodevelopmental disorder and, in particular, with ASD. ED could represent a specific target for early interventions aimed at enhancing adaptive functioning in early childhood.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9035819PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.846146DOI Listing

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