Autism Therapy: psychotic

definition of psychotic: not yet defined.

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Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology, by Calare, CA, Acion L., Kuperman S., Tansey M., and Schlechte JA, published in 2009, summarized Aug 18, 2009

Risperidone therapy may result in weight gain and metabolism changes in typical children and adolescents and those with pervasive developmental disorder.

This study measured weight and body mass index (BMI) for 99 children and adolescents (7-17 years old). Metabolism tests (measures of how the body uses food and energy) were also performed. The patients had been taking risperidone for nearly 3 years. Only some of the patients had pervasive developmental disorder (PDD). In the total group of patients, 19% were overweight and 15% were obese. The authors compared metabolism test results of the overweight/obese patients with the lean patients. The overweight/obese patients had more abnormal metabolism tests than the lean patients. For example, the overweight/obese patients had higher triglycerides (types of fatty acids) and higher insulin concentrations than the lean patients. However, few of the patients had metabolic syndrome. Metabolic syndrome is a combination of metabolism changes linked to higher risk of heart disease.


The Scientific World Journal, by Ventegodt, S., Kandel I., and Merrick J., published in 2007, summarized Feb 29, 2008

Psychotherapy that works to bring together the different parts of a person's sense of self (clinical holistic medicine) can help patients with schizophrenia and autism.

This paper includes a case study of a 30-year-old man with schizophrenia and autism who was cured by three years of clinical holistic medicine. When he first arrived at the clinic he had autism and was not in touch with his emotions. He had been abandoned in early childhood by his mother and father. After three years of therapy he had a social life and his behavior was much improved. The authors believe that psychodynamic treatment/clinical holistic medicine should be the treatment of choice for schizophrenia.


Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, by Dosseters, DR, published in 2007, summarized Jan 3, 2008

Some children who may seem psychotic actually have autism and can be helped by autism therapies.

This paper describes a series of children (case studies) who had autism instead of psychosis. The author writes about very early onset schizophrenia (VEOS), which is not very common. He has found in his practice that many children who were brought to him because the parents thought they had VEOS actually were acting up from anxiety from autism. The children were young and did not have the verbal skills to describe what they were feeling. The children improved with autism therapies.


Journal of Psychopharmacology, by Shastri, M., Alla L., and Sabaratnam M., published in 2006, summarized Mar 1, 2007

Aripiprazole treatment may help to decrease violence and increase physical activity in people with autism.

The authors of this paper define challenging behavior as "behavior of such intensity, frequency, or duration that the physical safety of the person or others is likely to be placed in serious jeopardy." The paper describes the effects of aripiprazole therapy on challenging behavior in five people, one of whom has autism. The patient with autism was a 38-year-old Afro-Caribbean man with severe intellectual disabilities. Before starting the study, he was given risperidone (3 mg twice daily) and chlorpromazine (100 mg three times a day) and had gained 150 pounds in 2 years. During the study he was given aripiprazole (15 mg/day) and gradually taken off of risperidone. He was less violent and more alert on aripiprazole, and he lost about 30 pounds in two years.


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Autism and mental health

Sep 5, 2009 by Anonymous

Has anyone had experience with autism and mental health issues? Specifically, my son was diagnosed with a psychotic disorder NOS and his psychiatrist said that this is not unusual in those children/adults on the spectrum. I wondered if anyone else has had this experience. Thanks for any help/ideas you could offer.


Carnitine fumarate

Mar 23, 2007 by Anonymous

My son has Prader-Willi Syndrome and I know this is different from autism. I am posting this entry here, though, because his response to carnitine fumarate is really amazing. His OT was really impressed with how it has improved his processing speed. It works by improving fatty acid metabolism. Fatty acid metabolism is an area of active research for autism therapy. There doesn't really seem to be a downside to giving carnitine fumarate (other than diarrhea).

The text below is lifted from www.PWSNotes.org

 

So, what is L-carnitine _fumarate_? Most L-carnitine sold by supplement manufacturers is either L-carnitine hydrochloride or L-carnitine _tartrate_ (L-carnitine bound to tartrate). With L-carnitine _fumarate_ (which was developed and patented by Sigma Tau, the maker of Carnitor), the carnitine is bound to fumarate, which is a key substrate in what is called the Kreb's cycle in mitochondria for the production of energy. It is the Kreb's cycle that produces the electrons that are then passed along respiratory transport chain complexes 1-IV for the production of ATP (the basic cellular form of energy). Citrate synthase is the key enzyme involved in the first step of the Kreb's cycle and as such can be rate-limiting for the whole cycle. Fumarate, though, is the substrate for the next to last step in the Krebs cycle and its related enzyme is fumarase.

About 58% of L-carnitine fumarate is L-carnitine, with the rest being fumarate. After it is ingested, the body separates the L-carnitine from the fumarate. Although I can't say for sure at this point, what might be happening is that the L-carnitine part is going off and doing all of the good things it is known for in terms of transporting fatty acids into the mitochondria for burning for energy and whatnot, while the fumarate is entering the Kreb's cycle and boosting its output of electrons that are then transferred to the electron transport chain, resulting in an increase in the production of cellular energy in the form of ATP. If that's what is happening, it could be the extra fumarate is providing a pathway around a metabolic block, possibly in succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), given that SDH is the enzyme that catalyzes the succinate-to-fumarate reaction. If so, it could be that the impairment in respiratory chain transport is not a primary event but is instead a downstream result of reduced substrate availability in the Kreb's cycle. (Interestingly, fumarase deficiency is a very rare autosomal recessive disorder in which the metabolizing of fumarate in the Kreb's cycle is sharply reduced or completely absent and is characterized by massive secretion of fumarate in the urine, encephalopathy, hypotonia and severe developmental delays, all of which (aside from excessive fumarate secretion) are rather reminiscent of another syndrome that we are all too familiar with.)

The Pure Caps capsules contain 586 mg of L-carnitine fumarate, with 340 mg of that being L-carnitine and 246 mg being fumarate. Sulli is only getting 1/4 capsule a day, which works out to about 85 mg of L-carnitine and 60 mg of fumarate for a 16 lb (7.25 kg) baby, which is about 12 mg/kg/day of L-carnitine and 8 mg/kg/day of fumarate. That's a surprisingly small amount of L-carnitine to be providing such dramatic benefit, given that the recommended dosage range for Carnitor is 35-50 mg/kg/day, and provides further support for the hypothesis that the fumarate part could be providing a significant amount of the benefit.

I've spent some time looking into the safety of L-carnitine fumarate and fumarate. L-carnitine fumarate is a relatively new form of carnitine and there aren't many clinical studies involving its use. The studies I found all have to do with Sigma Tau's patented formula for male infertility, ProXeed (yes, among other things, carnitine helps sperm swim better :-). The daily dose of that formula contains 2 g/day of L-carnitine fumarate, 1 g/day of acetyl-l-carnitine, 4 g/day of fructose and an unspecified amount of citric acid (which is also a metabolite in the Kreb's cycle), and in clinical trials seems to have been very well tolerated aside from the usual occasional side effects of large doses of carnitine (i.e., transient nausea and digestive upset, loose stools, etc.).

I have not been able to find any reports of fumarate being used as a supplement. However, fumarate is a component of ferrous fumarate (used globally for iron deficiency anemia in children and adults), as well as a number of drugs, including quetiapine and retroviral inhibitors such as tenofovir. In general it seems to be a safe substance (although it probably shouldn't be used by those with fumarase deficiency).

So what's the bottom line here? It could be that the L-carnitine vs. acetyl-l-carnitine question will become moot and the L-carnitine fumarate form could become the carnitine of choice for those with PWS.

For those who are interested in trying L-carnitine fumarate, the Pure Caps page for it is at http://www.purecaps.com/itemdy00.asp?T1=LCF1, with supplementary information at http://www.purecaps.com/PDF/pi/l_Carnitine_Fumarate.pdf. Jarrow also has (http://www.jarrow.com/product.php?prodid=191), as does Doctor's Best (http://www.drbvitamins.com/nutritionalproducts_details.asp?id=16). Make sure the label specifies that the L-carnitine is the fumarate form and not the more commonly available L-carnitine tartrate. All of the L-carnitine fumarate on the market is made by Sigma Tau and is pharmaceutical grade.

Please note that I am in the process of revising the carnitine and Coenzyme Q10 articles to suggest that, especially for older children, carnitine and/or CoQ10 supplementation be started with very low doses and then very slowly increased in order to give the child (and their parents) plenty of time to adapt to more normal levels of mental and physical energy. After all, older children with PWS have lived with a significant mental and physical energy deficit for years and to them that is "normal." Then CoQ10 or carnitine is started, and all of a sudden the world is a brighter, busier place, they're experiencing all kinds of new perceptions and sensations, and their thinking is zipping along at a significantly faster pace. It's probably much like going from a dim room out into bright sunlight, except way more intense because the increase in energy they're experiencing is a full body and mind experience. So it's not surprising that it could be a somewhat disorienting experience that could lead to emotional, mental and physical reactions that others interpret as irritability. I therefore consider it important that the increase in mental and physical energy provided by CoQ10 and/or carnitine be increased very slowly so as to give the child and their parents plenty of time to adapt, physically, mentally and emotionally, to each step up to a higher level of energy as the dose is slowly increased. It will also probably be helpful if the parents talk with the child ahead of time about what kinds of things they might experience when the CoQ10 or carnitine.

I think the need to proceed very slowly is somewhat less of an issue for infants and toddlers, especially those who are badly delayed in such things as babbling and talking, head control, sitting, and walking, as they have not spent nearly as much time entrained by a significant energy deficit and I think it is important to get them developmentally on track as soon as possible. But as always, it is critical that parents use their intimate knowledge of their child and intuition in determining the approach that will be best for their child.

I also need to note that there is the possibility that the irritability reported in some of those with PWS when CoQ10 supplementation is started could be due to the increased energy unmasking an intrinsic behavioral disturbance that was previously "sedated" by a serious impairment in cellular energy availability. At this point I have no way of determining how much of that irritability could be the result of a some level of understandable disorientation due to a sudden increase in mental and physical energy (as described above) or is due to an unmasking effect. If it does turn out that CoQ10, carnitine, or anything else that improves energy metabolism and mitochondrial function in PWS to more normal levels can unmask a previously sedated behavioral disturbance, I think there are ways that could be dealt with, but that is beyond the scope of this post. I will note once again, though, that my hunch is that at least some of the severe behavioral problems associated with PWS are due to (1) chronic intermittent hypoxia and sleep fragmentation caused by under- or untreated breathing disorders, and/or (2) untreated energy metabolism problems that lead to repeated episodes of hypoglycemia, which is well-known to cause severe irritability and anxiety as well as psychotic-like symptoms and out-of-control rages. I therefore consider it essential that any breathing disorder be aggressively treated and every effort made to ensure stable blood sugar levels throughout the day.

 



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