PREDNISONE RESEVERSES SPEECH LOSS -- AUTISM AND OTHERS

PREDNISONE RESEVERSES SPEECH LOSS -- AUTISM AND OTHERS

A Look at Prednisone in Treating Autism
(This information comes directly from the Ahead With Autism website.)

It is not intended as medical advice, rather it is for the reader's
information. To date, prednisone appears to be one of the only medications that has
a high rate of success in treating the underlying cause of speech loss or lack of speech in autism.
IMPORTANT: Prednisone is a very strong medication, and MUST be administered under a physician's prescription and close surveillance. Treatment should start with several tests to provide a baseline from which to measure the results. Treatment with prednisone is not a stand-alone intervention for autism. Parents MUST also pursue appropriate interventions such as behavioral therapy, speech and occupational therapy where needed, and should not rule out dietary interventions. Other medications may be called for as well (e.g., Prozac, Clonidine), though the neurologist may wait to use other medications until treatment with prednisone is finished, or may recommend continuing with medications already in use.
Prednisone is not a new drug; has been used for almost 50 years for a
variety of diseases. Its side effects are very well understood. However, its
use for treating autism is still in the early stages.
Note: the use of prednisone in autism is still experimental, and has
not been clinically studied in a scientific manner. No "random
placebo-controlled crossover" studies have been carried out, nor have there
been any long term follow-up studies of children who have received
prednisone for autism. To date, its effectiveness and safety are known only
through only anecdotal evidence from parents and doctors, based on
individual accounts or small sample sizes. There is no way at this time to
predict whether prednisone could be helpful or harmful for any given child.

What does prednisone do for autism?

The primary effect is to "unlock" the speech and language capacity in
autistic children, both regressive (those who previously had some speech and
then lost it), as well as those who never developed speech.
So far, it has been hard to quantify whether prednisone (by itself)
materially improves behavior or social skills; however:
Speech & language development is THE MOST IMPORTANT KEY to improving
behavior and socialization and helping the child "get to normal". For this
reason, it is important that you consider prednisone treatment as part of an
overall treatment program.

In children with Landau-Kleffner Syndrome (LKS) or variants, which are
marked by an abnormal EEG and sometimes by seizures, prednisone helps
normalize the EEGs and reduce seizures, as well as improving speech /
language functioning. However, it is not known how these effects are
related.

What exactly is prednisone? What else is it used for? A brief history
of prednisone and how it came to be used for autism
Prednisone is a steroid; NOT the anabolic steroid that bodybuilders
use, but rather a "corticosteroid", like the hydrocortisone used to treat
inflammation, or to treat autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis
and asthma. Prednisone is the generic name; some common brand names are
Prelone, Deltasone, Meticorten, Orasone, Prednisolone and SK-Prednisone.
Prednisone was developed in 1955 as a man-made replica of cortisone, a
hormone produced by the outer portion (or cortex) of the adrenal glands,
located on top of the kidneys. Cortisone and related hormones help regulate
the blood pressure, salt and water balance, and controls inflammation. It
may also be important for normal brain development. The adrenal glands
normally produce about 25mg of cortisone a day, which is equivalent to about
5mg of prednisone a day.

When prescribed in higher doses, prednisone suppresses inflammation as
well as the body's immune system, and can help treat a variety of diseases
such as severe allergies or skin problems, asthma, arthritis, ulcerative
colitis, and multiple sclerosis. Prednisone is also used to help prevent
rejection of organ transplants.

The original uses of steroids (dating back to 1948) were to treat
immune-system diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and polio. Over time, it
became clear that it could treat many other conditions as well, and could
suppress the immune system in the case of organ transplants.
Prednisone was used to treat certain childhood epilepsies in the
1970s, as it helped to reduce seizure frequency and normalize epileptic
EEGs. In the 1980s, it began to be used for treatment of seizures and
abnormal EEGs in LKS, infantile spasms, Lenex-Gastault syndrome (multiple
seizures coupled with global delays) and related conditions, where its
effects on speech recovery were noted. In the 1990s, some neurologists began
using it to treat autism & Autistic Spectrum Disorders even when no seizures
or EEG abnormalities were noted, first only the regressive form and later
the "delayed from birth" form.

The moral here is, although its use in autism is new, prednisone has a
long history behind it.
How does it work for autism?
No-one knows the exact mechanisms of action for prednisone or other
steroids in autism, LKS or epilepsy, or even in diseases such as multiple
sclerosis. As stated, it helps reduce seizures and normalize EEGs in LKS,
but it is not clear how that is related to its effect on speech and language
functioning.
In fact, no-one knows what causes autism, so it is far from clear how
any medication treats it.

A leading theory is that autism is the result of an autoimmune
reaction (i.e., the body's own immune system attacking itself), similar to
disorders such as diabetes and multiple sclerosis. More information can be
found on the Autism Autoimmunity Project website. The theory goes something
like this: the body's immune system reacts to an outside "insult", such as a
disease, a vaccine or a toxin, but it is triggered into an abnormal response
and starts to attack parts of the brain as well. Studies on diseases such as
multiple sclerosis and dyslexia are beginning to suggest that the autoimmune
attacks on myelin (the sheath surrounding nerve fibers) may be a key to the
disorder.

Some possible mechanisms are:
Reduction of myelin inflammation
Restoration and stabilization of cell membranes, including myelin
Improvement of neuro-hormonal pathways
Creation of new synapses
Multiple effects at the cellular level

For more information, questions or national resource suggestions, please email us at autismcoaches@yahoo.com

CuringAutism's picture

Autism

Thanks for a very informative article. I am glad I found it and I will certainly send it along.

Great Stuff

Thanks for a very informative article.

Our experience

I set out on a quest to research prednisone after our autistic son became very sick and was given 2 shots of prednisone to help him breathe and other inahaled steroids. The results were not what we had expected. He completely changed before our eyes. He was looking around at the world as if it was the first time he as seeing it. His language exploded! He reponded to me emotionally, which has never happened. He seemed typical to me. Now, about a week later, and the results are starting to fade, but it is something we are now looking into. BTW...the only side effects we saw was hunger! For us that was good, as he has lost so much weight!

Thanks for your article. It

Thanks for your article. It was very very educational. Keep posting like this and maybe people will stop thinking only at themselves or just like idiots. Maybe they will stop eating crap food or taking steroids and just take life a little bit more serious.

Interested in learning more about your experience

your experience sharing would be surely helpful to us as there isn't much out there on it.

Please help us understand it better if you went further beyond those 2 shots. what were the strength of those shots?, how much apart?, how recovered your child is now?, your recommendations etc

Early intervention always

Early intervention always helps. like in the cases of autism, early treatment should be provided.Even in the cases of drug addiction, early detection will help in fast recovery. drug treatment and any other kind of treatment in the early stages is always helpful.
http://www.alcohol-rehab.mobi/15/no-way-to-sugarcoat-drug-treatment/

Hi. THanks for your comments

Hi. THanks for your comments and sharing your experience. We just went through a similar experience w/ our 7 year old son with autism. He had to use it for a severe skin reaction that continued to spread. I was pretty stressed out about it as I've never used drugs w/ our son. He'd had a 9 day dose of antibiotics that began 5 days prior to having to start the Pred. A 4 day round with the Pred and we had a child whose autistic behaviors improved by leaps and bounds...incredible eye contact, social engagement, more interest in others, relaxed body, better concentration, the list goes on. Therapists and teachers noticed it, too! In fact, the 1st day, they brought it up! How long have the effects lasted? Even as the effects slipped away, is he still further ahead than he was before the Pred? My son had been tested 4 years ago for brain inflammation and had it. We used the hyperbaric chamber and spironolactone for a while. I think we're on to something, here. Just nervous about the side effects and the future effects.

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