Hormone oxytocin offers possible autism treatment
ModernMedicine
Email successfully sent
close windowTreatment with the hormone oxytocin improves social interactions and performance, and enhances feelings of trust in subjects with high-functioning autism or Asperger's syndrome during simulated social interaction, according to a study published online Feb. 16 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Elissar Andari, of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Bron, France, and colleagues administered oxytocin or placebo to 13 subjects with autism spectrum conditions (mean age, 26 years) during separate sessions playing Cyberball, a computer ball-toss game featuring social interaction with fictional characters. A control group of 13 sex- and age-matched healthy subjects also played the game for comparison. The subjects' performance under oxytocin or placebo was observed, including the distribution of ball tosses to the game's "good" and "bad" characters in response to social cues, the subjects' emotional response to the characters, and, in another exercise, the subjects' eye movement as they scanned pictures of faces.
The researchers found that the oxytocin subjects directed the ball significantly more often to the good characters than to the bad players. These subjects also reported feeling more trust toward the good than the bad characters. Finally, the researchers reported that the oxytocin subjects gazed longer at faces and had a reduced frequency of rapid eye movements.
Related Articles
Video: Autism in Iraq
The ongoing instability in Iraq is taking a toll on the well-being of the very young. Parents who need special ..
Both Parents’ Ages Linked to Autism Risk
Older mothers are more likely than younger ones to have a child with autism, and older fathers significantly c ..
Lancet retracts 1998 paper that linked the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine to autism
The medical journal The Lancet on Tuesday retracted a controversial 1998 paper that linked the measles, mumps ..
