WASHINGTON, Aug 14: Pregnant women who don’t produce enough thyroid
hormone are nearly four times likelier to give birth to autistic
children than their healthy peers, a new study has claimed.
Scientists from the Houston Methodist Neurological Institute in US and
Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam, Netherlands studied more than 4,000
Dutch mothers and their children.
Their results support the growing view that autism spectrum disorders
can be caused by a lack of maternal thyroid hormone, which past studies
have shown is crucial to the migration of foetal brain cells during
embryo development.
“It is increasingly apparent to us that autism is caused by
environmental factors in most cases, not by genetics. That gives me hope
that prevention is possible,” said lead author Gustavo Roman, a
neurologist and neuroepidemiologist who directs the Nantz National
Alzheimer Center.
The researchers also found that autistic children had more pronounced
symptoms if their mothers were severely deficient for T4, also called
thyroxine. Mild T4 deficiencies in mothers produced an insignificant
increase in autistic children’s symptoms.
The most common cause of thyroid hormone deficiency is a lack of dietary
iodine – because both the thyroid hormones, T3 and T4, contain that
element.
The present work was based on the Generation R Study, conducted by
Erasmus Medical Centre doctors and social scientists, in which thousands
of pregnant women were voluntarily enrolled between 2002 and 2006.
Researchers identified 80 “probable autistic children” from a population of 4,039.
Around 159 mothers were identified as being severely T4 deficient
(defined as having 5 per cent or less of normal T4, but producing a
normal amount of thyroid stimulating hormone), and 136 were identified
as mildly T4 deficient.
The researchers found a weak association between mild T4 deficiency and
the likelihood of producing an autistic child, but a strong association
between severe T4 deficiency and autism (3.89 more likely, as compared
with mothers with normal thyroid hormone).
The study presents a troubling correlation, but it does not prove that
the thyroid function of expecting mothers causes autism in their
children, researchers said.
The study will be published in the journal Annals of Neurology. (PTI)
Source: http://tinyurl.com/kljyqa7
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