Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
autism-india · The Indian Autism Mailing List
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want to share photos of your group with the world? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
How diet cured a boy = thanks to schafer report   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #24 of 967 |

Autism: How Diet Cured Tom

[By Rosalind Ryan for femail.co.uk. For our readers' information only;

it is not intended as medical advice.]

http://www.femail.co.uk/pages/standard/article.html?in_article_id=149500&in_

page_id=171 <- - address ends here.

Long car journeys with young children - full of endless questions,

chatter and games of I Spy - leave many parents with a headache.

But until recently mum Helen Bennett positively longed for her little

boy to behave just like that.

Instead Tom, five, would spend all his car journeys - and most of his

days - in total silence.

He was locked in his own world, unable to engage properly with life

around him due to a form of autism called Asperger Syndrome.

The devastating symptoms affected almost every area of his life. At

nursery as other children played he would sit alone, engrossed in his own

thoughts and obsessively lining up his toys.

But in the past six months all this has changed. Despite being told by

doctors that her son's condition was incurable, Helen has found a treatment

has improved Tom's condition beyond recognition.

Here we present the story of how a new treatment has improved Tom's

Asperger Syndrome.

When their little boy was born, Helen and Paul Bennett were overjoyed.

But he was immediately put on antibiotics to protect him from a virus

he had picked up in the womb and as he grew his ill health continued.

'As a baby, he was always vomiting and seemed to pick up every virus

that was going,' says Helen, 38.

His sleeping patterns were also erratic. For the first two years of

his life, he would only sleep for two or three minutes at a time before

waking. When he reached the age of three, this pattern reversed and he began

sleeping excessively in the afternoons. As he grew older, Helen and Paul

began to notice other oddities in Tom's behaviour. He did not seem quite

like other children.

'The most distinctive sign was that when he got excited or was

concentrating on something, he would flap his arms quickly,' says Helen.

World of his own Tom also became vacant at times, disappearing into a

world of his own. He also began shaking involuntarily and had terrible

temper tantrums over things that 'normal' children would not react to.

Helen's friends, family and even her health visitor told her she

should not be worried about Tom's behaviour. It was often dismissed as a

mannerism that he would grow out of, but Helen was convinced that something

was not right with her son.

The first person who agreed with her was Tom's nursery school teacher.

She had worked with autistic children before and suggested that Helen take

Tom to her GP to be tested for the condition.

Frustratingly for Helen and Paul, their doctor also said they should

not worry about his behaviour, but at their insistence, he referred them to

a specialist. After assessing Tom, the specialist made the diagnosis that

Tom was suffering from Asperger Syndrome.

The condition is a form of autism, a spectrum of developmental

disabilities that affects the way a person communicates and relates to the

people around them.

Asperger Syndrome is on the lesser end of the spectrum. This means

that sufferers have some of the symptoms of autism - such as difficulty

forming relationships, problems with communication and a love of routines or

set patterns - but they are not as severe as those forms on the other end of

the spectrum who can also have learning disabilities.

It is not known what causes Asperger Syndrome, but there are a number

of theories that it could be triggered by a physical factor - such as an

illness - that affects brain development.

No cure Although many sufferers can eventually be taught how to

communicate with others Helen was told there was no known cure for the

condition.

'It was absolutely devastating,' says Helen. 'Nobody wants an autistic

child - the word autism conjures up images of an emotionally detached child

banging their head against a wall. Who wants that for their child? I felt

terrible.

'We always thought that Tom would be like us; sociable and outgoing

with lots of friends, but when we were told he had Asperger Syndrome, we

realised that we had a son who wouldn't want to do that and who would never

really be like us.

'There was no history of autism in my family so I had no idea of what

to expect. Doctors and specialists kept telling me it was mental illness

with no cure. We just had to learn to live with it.' Helen had to come to

terms with the idea that her son would never go on to form the close

relationships she herself had enjoyed as a child. She also had to accept

that he might never tell her he loved her and would appear to be completely

indifferent to her feelings.

Helen began doing her own research into Asperger Syndrome. The more

she learnt, the angrier and more frustrated she became.

'The child development specialist told me that Tom might get bullied

when he went to school and would find it difficult to make friends,' she

says. 'I began thinking that I didn't want this for my son and was

determined to find something that could help him.' Diet By chance, one of

Helen's friends happened to attend a seminar on treating Asperger Syndrome

and autism through diet. The doctor giving the seminar, Dr Jean Munro, ran a

clinic for treating children with behavioural disorders in the town where

they lived, Hemel Hempstead.

After just one visit to see Dr Munro at the nearby Breakespear

Hospital Helen felt she had found the answer to Tom's illness.

Dr Munro believes that autism and Asperger Syndrome are caused by

damage to the bowel. Her theory is that giving children antibiotics in the

first year of their lives - or during pregnancy - damages the lining of the

bowel, making it more porous.

This damage affects the way people with autism digest their food.

Ordinarily, the body breaks down certain proteins in our food into

components called peptides. These peptides are then broken down into smaller

particles that can easily pass through the wall of the intestines.

But because it is thought antibiotics can cause bowels to become more

porous, their intestines absorb the peptides before they have been broken

down properly.

These peptides then pass through into the bloodstream, damaging the

brain and causing the symptoms of autism.

Some of these peptides mimic the drug morphine, so a child suffering

from autism would be expected to have high levels of this morphine-like

chemical in their bloodstream.

'Tom had been given antibiotics almost continuously for the first six

months of his life so it all started to make sense to me,' says Helen. 'A

urine test then confirmed that he had high levels of this morphine in his

blood. This accounted for his high pain threshold, unusual sleep patterns

and other symptoms - it felt like we had found a 'cure' for Tom's

condition.' Sensitivity The majority of these peptides have been identified

as coming from gluten, sugar and dairy, so Dr Munro recommends her patients

eliminate these foods from their diet. A further sensitivity test may then

be required to identify any other possible food triggers.

Helen started Tom on the gluten, dairy and sugar free diet in July

this year, one month after his first visit to the clinic. In just four

months, Helen has been astounded by the change in his behaviour.

She says he is becoming generally more aware of what is around him and

has started taking an interest in other people - such as by asking them

questions. He has also started remembering more information and can recall

it more easily than before.

Another symptom of autism is dark circles under the eyes, thought to

be caused by the child's inability to absorb the proper amount of nutrients

from their diet. Tom also suffered from these circles but since starting the

diet, they have virtually disappeared.

The biggest change in Tom's behaviour has been his interaction with

other children. Helen says, 'Before starting the diet I noticed that other

children would be having conversations but Tom wouldn't be joining in. He

was always too involved in his own activities, such as obsessively lining up

all his toys in neat rows.

'He never used to have one special friend but now he has got a big

group of friends that go round to each other's houses for tea. He has even

got a little girlfriend!' Tom will have to follow the diet for the rest of

his life to control the symptoms of his Asperger Syndrome, but this is no

different to somebody with a dairy or gluten allergy who has to cut these

foods out of their diet. He may also need additional sensitivity tests to

identify any other foods that trigger his condition.

Change Since the change in Tom's behaviour, Helen and Paul now feel

they have the chance to get to know their 'real' son, but they are not yet

making any big plans for his future life or career.

Tom's condition has already improved by 80 per cent and Helen and Paul

hold out hope that he may one day completely recover. If his behaviour

continues to improve as dramatically as it has done so far, this could be a

real possibility.

'I noticed a difference after just two days on the diet and it was

really dramatic,' says Helen. 'Normally on long car journeys Tom and I would

sit in silence as he was absorbed in his own world.

'But this time we were driving and he said 'Look Mummy, there's a

tree' and I almost crashed the car! It was the first time he has ever taken

an interest in his surroundings like that and it has given me real hope for

the future.'

 

Jyoti kennedy



Tue May 13, 2003 3:23 pm

kennedy_nj
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Attachment
Glacier Bkgrd.jpg
Type:
image/jpeg
Forward
Message #24 of 967 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

GlacierAutism: How Diet Cured Tom [By Rosalind Ryan for femail.co.uk. For our readers' information only; it is not intended as medical advice.] ...
N J KENNEDY
kennedy_nj
Offline Send Email
May 13, 2003
4:54 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help