AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the potential relationship between autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and joint hypermobility (JH) in a cohort of 67 non-syndromic children, aged 2-18 years, with varying levels of cognitive impairment and autism severity.
  • Findings reveal that a noteworthy percentage (63% of ages 2-4 and 73% of ages 5+) of ASD patients display significant signs of hypermobility.
  • The study concludes that joint hypermobility might be a relevant characteristic in ASD patients, suggesting that it should be evaluated to enhance rehabilitation strategies, though no strong link was found between hypermobility and cognitive or autism severity scores.

Article Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and joint hypermobility (JH) are considered two different etiological and clinical entities that most often appear in childhood. Despite growing increased research showing a co-occurrence for both conditions, a link between them is rarely established in clinical settings, and the relationship between ASD and JH has not so far been completely investigated in all age groups of ASD children. This preliminary study examined a cohort of 67 non-syndromic ASD children aged 2-18 years (sex ratio M:F = 12:1) showing different degrees of cognitive impairment and autism severity, using the Beighton scale and its revised version. A total of 63% of ASD patients aged 2-4 years and 73% of ASD patients aged ≥5 years presented significant scores of hypermobility. No significant correlation was found comparing total laxity score and cognitive assessments and severity of autistic symptomatology ( > 0.05). The results suggest that JH could be considered as a clinical characteristic of ASD patients and it needs to be assessed in order to schedule a better rehabilitation program.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10744756PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm13121723DOI Listing

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