Showing posts with label toxins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toxins. Show all posts

Friday, May 7, 2010

What Causes Childhood Apraxia of Speech and Is It Preventable?

From CASANA

First, it is important for parents to understand that there is most likely nothing that you did to “cause” your child’s speech disability. It is not about how much you talked to your child or whether or not you had them in daycare, for example. Your child does not have apraxia because you separated from your spouse or because you moved to a new city. So while we know that parents have a strong role in healthy child development, unless there was abuse, neglect, or isolation, you are not responsible for causing your child’s speech disorder.

The current knowledge that we have about Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) is this. CAS occurs in the following 3 conditions:

  • Neurological impairment caused by infection, illness, or injury, before or after birth or a random abnormality or glitch in fetal development. This category includes children with positive findings on MRI’s of the brain.
  • Complex Neurodevelopmental Disorders – We know that CAS can occur as a secondary characteristic of other conditions such as genetic, metabolic, and/or mitochondrial disorders. In this category would be Childhood Apraxia of Speech that occurs with Autism, Fragile X, Galactosemia, some forms of Epilepsy, and Chromosome translocations involving duplications and deletions.
  • Idiopathic Speech Disorder (a disorder of “unknown” origin) – with this condition, we currently don’t know “why” the child may have CAS. Children do not have observable neurological abnormalities or easily observed neurodevelopmental conditions.

Parents often ask if their child may have apraxia due to medical complications during pregnancy or childbirth. There are currently no studies that suggest a direct relationship between complications of pregnancy or childbirth and a specific increase in risk for apraxia of speech. For example, an umbilical cord wrapped around the neck of a fetus could theoretically cut off oxygen supply and possibly lead to neurological injury, eventually resulting in a CAS diagnosis. However, such a condition could also NOT result in CAS or even neurological injury. Some children are born just fine even though there was some complication during pregnancy or birth. So, while it is possible that a complication could result in neurological damage that might contribute toward a motor speech disorder like CAS, research has not told us when or how this would occur.

Some speculate that some forms of CAS and other childhood conditions may be a result, in part, of environmental conditions such as exposure to pollutants and toxins before or after birth. Others speculate that nutritional deficits or malabsorbtions cause CAS. We do know that, generally, toxins and nutritional deficits do cause some developmental problems, but to date these theories, as they relate specifically to CAS, are only speculations.

That said, a child’s positive health would contribute to their ability to benefit from their learning exposures and from therapy designed to help them. A child who is healthy is more fully capable of taking advantage of opportunities to learn. Children who are sick frequently with ear and sinus infections, enlarged tonsils and adenoids, asthma, allergies or have sleep disturbances, poor diets, attention and behavioral difficulties are going to find it much more difficult to benefit from the help provided. Helping your child be healthy and thus more “present” to the learning opportunities around them is one way parents can help.

Most likely in the future we will learn that CAS is caused by multiple factors and conditions, not one. To the extent that research evidence becomes available that CAS is caused by some factor(s) that can be manipulated to reduce or eliminate it, will determine whether or not it is preventable. Until then, we do know that appropriate speech therapy provided frequently and in consideration of motor-speech treatment principles offers the single most important opportunity for children with CAS to improve their speech capacity. Children who are able to maintain optimum health will most likely directly benefit the most from appropriate help.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Response to Op.Ed. on Environmental Toxins & Neurodevelopmental Disorders


[Note: This blog article is in response to the February 24, 2010 New York Times Op. Ed by Nicholas Kristof titled, "Do Toxins Cause Autism?"]

By Tesi Kohlenburg

Kristof is on the mark here in so many ways. Philip Landrigan was the keynote speaker at my organization's Fall conference here, and his talk was both fascinating and frightening.

As a pediatrician, as a child psychiatrist, and as a mother, there are a handful of things that I believe we all should do NOW:

1. Stop heating food in plastics. ( And don't put away warm left-overs in plastic containers, either. And don't drink things that have been left sitting in plastic bottles in warm locations like cars. And don't drink soft drinks and juices from plastic bottles -- evidence is beginning to come in that the acids in soda pull chemicals out of the plastic bottles that are themselves promotors of obesity, independent of the calories in the soda. Most of all, don't put baby formula in plastic bottles containing Bisphenol A or other plasticizers.)

See this link for more about obesogens http://www.newsweek.com/id/215179

2. Learn which are the most pesticide-contaminated kinds of fruits and veggies, and either don't buy them, or buy them organic.
  • ( Berries, which are so good for us in many ways, are sadly among the worst offenders in terms of pesticide contamination.)

3. Read labels, and reduce or eliminate our exposure to food dyes and preservatives. This means making our family's meals from uncontaminated whole foods, fresh fruits and veggies, meat that hasn't been given hormones, etc... not eating from boxes, bags, and cans full of additives, stabilizers, texturizers etc.

4. Be very careful about disposing of chemicals. Whatever we put in the water goes into our world. See this CBS News report on the contamination of our drinking water with prescription medications: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RE7OK9sMDvo

For more resources, visit:
The Environmental Working Group at: http://www.ewg.org/home

OR

The Mount Sinai Children's Environmental Health Center (Dr. Landrigan's center) at:
http://tinyurl.com/c5xnx2 ).

This emerging knowledge can protect all of us and our children from the consequences of exposure to air, water, food and household materials full of newly-invented chemicals, many of which have not been tested, and a good number of which are now being shown to have undesirable effects on our bodies and brains. These chemicals can have powerful effects on fetal development and in early childhood, when all of the cells are differentiating and learning where they belong and how they're supposed to function.

With great concern and also hope that we can change,

Tesi Kohlenburg

[Tesi Kohlenburg is a physician and the parents of a child with apraxia of speech, dyspraxia]