Doctor of philosophy ph.d jesebel doydoy gumanit

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25/10/2022

Allergies
Allergies are an immune response triggered by allergens, an ordinarily harmful substance.

Causes
People with allergies have especially sensitive immune systems that react when they contact allergens.

Common allergens include:

foods (nuts, eggs, milk, soy, shellfish, wheat)
pollen
mold
latex
pet dander
Symptoms
Because there are so many possible causes, the symptoms of allergies vary widely. Airborne allergens, like pollen and pet dander, are likely to cause:

Eye irritation
Runny nose
Stuffy nose
Puffy, watery eyes
Sneezing
Inflamed, itchy nose and throat
Allergens that are consumed, like foods or certain medications, can cause:

Hives or skin rashes
Gastrointestinal distress (diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, excessing gas, indigestion)
Tingling or swelling of the lips, face, or tongue
Itchiness
Difficulty breathing or wheezing
Fainting/ or lightheadedness
In cases of a more extreme response, called anaphylaxis, symptoms are severe and life-threatening.

Treatment
The easiest and most effective way to treat allergies is to get rid of or avoid the cause. Where unavoidable, some lifestyle changes can reduce your allergy symptoms. For example, if you are allergic to dust mites, make an effort to keep your room clean and free of dust by frequent vacuuming, dusting, and washing of bedding.

For pollen allergies, avoid being outside when pollen counts are high and keep the windows to your room shut.

Because it is very difficult to avoid certain allergens, medication may be necessary to lessen symptoms caused by allergens, other than food and drugs.

Antihistamines: help relieve or prevent the sneezing, itchy eyes and throat, and postnasal drip that the allergen may cause. They are sold in many forms (i.e., pills, nasal sprays, liquids, etc.).
Decongestants: help reduce congestion in your nasal membranes by narrowing the blood vessels that supply those membranes. They can be purchased in several forms (liquid, pill or nasal spray) and may be used with an antihistamine or alone to treat nasal swelling related to allergies. Limit use of nasal sprays to fewer than two to three days in a row because prolonged use can cause the nasal membrane swells, resulting in severe nasal obstruction.
Anti-inflammatory agents (e.g., corticosteroid): help reduce swelling of the airways, nasal congestion and sneezing. Typically taken as a nasal spray. Some people report that corticosteroids irritate nasal passages.
Allergy shots: recommended for serious allergy sufferers, this series of shots are administered by a healthcare provider and contain small amounts of the allergens that cause you discomfort. The goal of allergy shots is to enable your immune system to build better defenses against allergens.
Some allergies go away with age, but others are lifelong.

Prevention
Avoid the outdoors between 5-10 a.m. and save outside activities for late afternoon or after a heavy rain, when pollen levels are lower.
Keep windows in your living spaces closed to lower exposure to pollen.
To keep cool, use air conditioners and avoid using window and attic fans.
Wear a medical alert bracelet or other means to communicate to others about your allergy in case of a reaction.
Discuss a prescription for epinephrine (e.g., EpiPen) with your healthcare provider, if you have risk of serious allergic reaction.
Review product labels carefully before buying or consuming any item
Know what you are eating or drinking.

25/10/2022

Take HIV medicines daily. Treatment with HIV medicines (called antiretroviral therapy or ART) helps people with HIV live longer, healthier lives. ART can’t cure HIV infection, but it can reduce the amount of HIV in the body (also called the viral load). A main goal of ART is to reduce a person’s viral load to an undetectable level. An undetectable viral load meansthat the level of HIV in the blood is too low to be detected by a viral load test. People with HIV who maintain an undetectable viral load have effectively no risk of transmitting HIV to their HIV-negative partner through s*x.
Here are some other steps you can take to protect your partner from HIV:
Use condoms correctly every time you have s*x.
Talk to your partner about taking PrEP.
If you inject drugs, don’t share your needles, syringes, or other drug equipment with your partner.


Are HIV medicines used in other situations to prevent HIV infection?



Yes, HIV medicines are also used for post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) and to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV.

Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP)
PEP is the use of HIV medicines to reduce the risk of HIV infection soon after a possible exposure to HIV. PEP may be used, for example, after a person has s*x without a condom with a person who has HIV or after a health care worker is accidentally exposed to HIV in the workplace. To be effective, PEP must be started within 3 days after the possible exposure to HIV. PEP involves taking HIV medicines each day for 28 days. For more information, read the AIDSinfo fact sheet on Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP).
Prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV
Women with HIV take HIV medicines during pregnancy and childbirth to reduce the risk of passing HIV to their babies and to protect their own health. Their newborn babies also receive HIV medicine for 4 to 6 weeks after birth. The HIV medicine reduces the risk of infection from any HIV that may have entered a baby’s body during childbirth. For more information, read the AIDSinfofact sheet on Preventing Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV.

25/10/2022

What Are the Stages of HIV Infection?
Without treatment, HIV advances in stages, overwhelming your immune system and getting worse over time. The three stages of HIV infection are: (1) acute HIV infection, (2) chronic hiv infection, and (3) AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome).

However, there’s good news: by using HIV medicines (called antiretroviral therapy or ART) consistently, you can prevent HIV from progressing to AIDS. ART helps control the virus so that you can live a longer, healthier life and greatly reduces the risk of transmitting HIV to others.

First Stage: Acute HIV Infection
Most people don't know right away when they've been infected with HIV, but a short time later, they may have symptoms. This is when your body's immune system puts up a fight, typically within 2 to 6 weeks after you've gotten the virus. It's called acute retroviral syndrome or primary HIV infection.

The symptoms are similar to those of other viral illnesses, and they're often compared to the flu. They typically last a week or two and then completely go away. They include:

Headache
Diarrhea
Nausea and vomiting
Fatigue
Aching muscles
Sore throat
Swollen lymph
nodes
A red rash that doesn't itch,
usually on your torso Fever
Doctors can now prevent HIV from taking hold in your body if they act quickly. People who may have been infected -- for example, had unprotected s*x with someone who is HIV-positive -- can take anti-HIV drugs to protect themselves. This is called PEP. But you must start the process within 72 hours of when you were exposed, and the medicines can have unpleasant side effects.

Second Stage: Chronic HIV Infection
After your immune system loses the battle with HIV, the flu-like symptoms will go away. Doctors may call this the asymptomatic or clinical latent period. Most people don't have symptoms you can see or feel. You may not realize you're infected and can pass HIV on to others. This stage can last 10 years or more.

During this time, untreated HIV will be killing CD4 T-cells and destroying your immune system. Your doctor can check how many you have with blood tests (normal counts are between 450 and 1,400 cells per microliter). As the number drops, you become vulnerable to other infections.

Fortunately, a combination, or "cocktail," of medications can help fight HIV, rebuild your immune system, and prevent spreading the virus. if you're taking medications and have healthy habits, your HIV infection may not progress further.

Third Stage: AIDS
AIDS is the advanced stage of HIV infection. This is usually when your CD4 T-cell number drops below 200. You can also be diagnosed with AIDS if you have an "AIDS defining illness" such as Kaposi's sarcoma (a form of skin cancer) or pneumocystis pneumonia (a lung disease).

If you didn't know you were infected with HIV earlier, you may realize it after you have some of these symptoms:

Being tired all of the time
Swollen lymph nodes in your neck or groin
Fever that lasts for more than 10 days
Night sweats
Unexplained weight loss
Purplish spots on your skin that don't go away
Shortness of breath
Severe, long-lasting diarrhea
Yeast Infection in your mouth, throat, or va**na
Bruises or bleeding you can't explain
People with AIDS who don't take medication only survive about 3 years, even less if they get a dangerous infection. But with the right treatment and a healthy lifestyle, you can live a long time.

25/10/2022

HIV is a virus spread through certain body fluids that attacks the body’s immune system, specifically the CD4 cells, often called T cells. Over time, HIV can destroy so many of these cells that the body can’t fight off infections and disease. These special cells help the immune system fight off infections. Untreated, HIV reduces the number of CD4 cells (T cells) in the body. This damage to the immune system makes it harder and harder for the body to fight off infections and some other diseases. Opportunistic infections or cancers take advantage of a very weak immune system and signal that the person has AIDS. Learn more about the stages of HIV and how to know whether you’re infected.

What Is HIV?

HIV stands for human immunodeficiency virus. It is the virus that can lead to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, or AIDS, if not treated. Unlike some other viruses, the human body can’t get rid of HIV completely, even with treatment. So once you get HIV, you have it for life.

HIV attacks the body’s immune system, specifically the CD4 cells (T cells), which help the immune system fight off infections. Untreated, HIV reduces the number of CD4 cells (T cells) in the body, making the person more likely to get other infections or infection-related cancers. Over time, HIV can destroy so many of these cells that the body can’t fight off infections and disease. These opportunistic infections or cancers take advantage of a very weak immune system and signal that the person has AIDS, the last stage of HIV infection.

No effective cure currently exists, but with proper medical care, HIV can be controlled. The medicine used to treat HIV is called antiretroviral therapy or ART. If taken the right way, every day, this medicine can dramatically prolong the lives of many people infected with HIV, keep them healthy, and greatly lower their chance of infecting others. Before the introduction of ART in the mid-1990s, people with HIV could progress to AIDS in just a few years. Today, someone diagnosed with HIV and treated before the disease is far advanced can live nearly as long as someone who does not have HIV.

What Is AIDS?
AIDS is the most severe phase of HIV infection. People with AIDS have such badly damaged immune systems that they get an increasing number of severe illnesses, called opportunistic infections.

25/10/2022


Follow your doctor's instructions. Take all of your medications on time and do not skip any doses. By doing this, you ensure that your "viral load" in your body fluids is low. This will keep your body healthier and reduce the chance of infecting those around you.

Consult a doctor if you become pregnant. If you're pregnant, talk to your doctor about options. While there is no vaccine or cure for this disease, there are medications that can be taken to reduce the chance of a mother passing the virus to a baby throughout the pregnancy, during labor and though breast-feeding. While this is not 100% effective, it does significantly reduce the risk.

25/10/2022


Contact a doctor about post-exposure prophylaxis. If you have been exposed, or fear that you have been exposed, to infected fluids, you may be able to take post-exposure prophylaxis, or PEP, an antiretroviral drug. This medication, when taken immediately after exposure (or up to 72 hours after) can drastically reduce the chance of becoming infected.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that only HIV negative people who have recently been exposed to HIV use this drug. Abusing this drug can result in serious health risks. While this drug does not cure HIV, it can, if used properly, prevent someone who has just been exposed from contracting the virus.

Look for symptoms. Two to four weeks after being infected, people who are HIV+ often, but not always, experience flu-like symptoms. This is called ARS (acute retroviral syndrome) and is described as the "worst flu ever." The person may experience fever, sore throat, swollen lymph nodes, and a rash. These symptoms may last up to 4 weeks.[21] If you notice these symptoms get tested right away.

Get tested regularly. Testing is the only way to actually know your status. When you get tested, you will most likely be given a blood test, although urine or a swab of fluid are also used. The results will come back in a few days or in as little as 20 minutes, depending on where and when you get tested. If you test as HIV+, meaning you have the virus, receive treatment as soon as possible.

25/10/2022


Reduce your exposure if you work around bodily fluids. Health professionals or anyone who comes into contact with bodily fluids that can carry the virus should always be cautious at work. Never recap sharp objects (syringes, lancets, etc.) after use. Always dispose of used sharp objects in a clear container to avoid accidental contact. Wear the proper safety protection (gloves, gowns, goggles, etc.) when working with blood or other fluids. Always treat all blood and body fluids as if they are infectious.

Take action after exposure. Whether you are health care worker who was splashed with a patient's blood, or you were having s*x while a condom broke, it's important to consult a doctor within 72 hours or as soon as possible. See the section on taking action for more detail.[17]
If you are pregnant or become pregnant, talk to a doctor about your pregnancy and HIV exposure to find out more about reducing the risk of transmission to the baby.

Practice safer s*x. If you know a s*xual partner is HIV positive, work out a way to have an intimate relationship with minimum risk. Use condoms while having s*x, or perform s*xual acts that do not exchange bodily fluids, such as having one person use their fingers or s*x toys instead of other body parts. See "reducing the risk of s*xual transmission" for more detail.

Research your options if you want to have children with an HIV+ person. Minimize the risk of a woman or baby contracting HIV from an HIV+ man through adoption or a s***m donor. If a woman has HIV, consider a surrogate mother. Using an HIV+ person's s***m is not recommended, but it can be treated by medical professionals to reduce, but not eliminate, HIV before it is used in in vitro fertilization or artificial insemination.[18] Having unprotected s*x with an HIV+ person carries the highest risk of transmission. Always talk to a medical professional before making this decision, and limit s*xual activity to the woman's most fertile point in the ovulation cycle.

Talk to a doctor about pre-exposure prophylaxis. This preventative medicine, also known as PrEP, is a drug taken daily by people who are exposed regularly HIV, such as people who frequently have s*x with HIV+ people. It may also be recommended for long-term s*xual partners of people who are at risk of HIV. It is not 100% effective, and is best combined with other safety practices such as condom use. It is important to take the drug every day in the instructed doses, or it will be much less effective.[19][20]
If you are not frequently exposed to HIV+ body fluids, PrEP is not for you. Instead, if there is an incident which may have transmitted HIV, ask a doctor about post-exposure prophylaxis immediately after the incident.

25/10/2022


Stop using injected drugs if possible. You can become infected with HIV by using a needle that has been previously used by someone with HIV. This can occur even if the needle appears clean. Because many injected drugs are addictive, it can be difficult to turn down an opportunity to inject, even if you know the needle is unsafe. Entering a substance abuse recovery program is highly recommended in this scenario.

Do not re-use or share needles when injecting drugs or receiving piercings or tattoos. Use new, sterile syringes each time, or confirm with the tattoo artist that they are not re-using a needle. Make sure to receive your needles from a reputable source. Never reuse or share anything used to prepare or take drugs, including water (as this could be contaminated with HIV-infected blood). After using, dispose of needles safely by throwing them away inside a closed bottle, preferably one with no recycling refund or collectible value.[15]
Some regions have free needle exchange programs where people can turn in used needles and receive clean ones in return. Search online for programs in your area.

Disinfect needles between use if you have no access to clean needles. If stopping or finding a new needle are not possible, clean and disinfect a used needle before injecting. This does not make the needle safe; it only partially reduces the risk. First, fill the syringe with clean water, shake it to dislodge particles of blood, then empty. Repeat this process several times, until no more blood is visible. Next, fill the syringe with a disinfectant such as household bleach, and let sit for at least 30 seconds. Empty and rinse gain with more clean water in order to remove the disinfectant.[16]
Bleach stored in a warm or sunny place can break down and become much less effective.

25/10/2022

Learn how to use a condom effectively. Practice putting on and removing a condom or a female condom several times before you use one during s*x for the first time. Talk to your s*xual partner in advance about condom use so you aren't pressured not to use one at the last minute, and make sure to put on the condom before any ge***al contact begins.[8] Male condoms should be pinched at the tip before putting them on, so there is room for the semen to collect. Make sure not to expose yourself to the portion of the condom that was exposed to your s*xual partner's fluids while removing the condom, especially if you have cuts on your hands. Follow these instructions as well for safest condom use:[9][10]
A condom or dental dam should never be torn, used past its expiration date, re-used, or used for more than 20 minutes at a time.
Apply a small amount of water-based l**e to the condom if necessary to prevent it from drying out and breaking. Never use oil-based l**es or lotions, which can damage the condom.
Pen*ses with condoms should be pulled out from orifices before the er****on is lost, as the condom may slip off when the p***s is no longer hard.
Store condoms inside their wrapper in a dark, dry location. Replace condoms that have been kept in your wallet or car for longer than one or two weeks.

Learn about HIV prevention myths. There are many myths or misunderstandings about how to protect yourself from HIV or AIDS during s*x. Learn the truth so you do not try to protect yourself with the wrong method. Understand that any form of s*x with an HIV positive person carries the risk of infection, and that condoms are one of the most reliable ways to reduce that risk.
You cannot prevent infection using any type of birth control besides condoms.
You cannot eliminate the chance of infection through circumcision. Studies show that circumcision partially reduces a man's chance of contracting HIV from an HIV+ woman.[11] However, this is not effective enough on its own to result in "safe s*x," and does not necessarily help at all in male-male s*xual encounters, or reduce the chance of a woman contracting HIV from a man.
There is no such thing as a special l**e, anti-microbe medicine, or vaccination that protects against HIV.[12] L**e is only useful in HIV prevention because it helps prevent condoms from breaking, not because it can stop the virus on its own.

Understand which s*xual practices reduce, but do not eliminate, the chance of infection. While no s*xual activity that involves the va**na, p***s, or a**s is completely safe, some involve lower risks than other and may be preferable if you have decided to have s*x with someone you know is HIV positive. Oral s*x, especially mouth-on-va**na, carries less risk than other forms of s*x, although studies are unclear on the exact level of risk.[13] Inserting fingers or s*x toys into the a**s or va**na carries little risk of transmission as long as the fingers do not have open cuts or sores, and the s*x toys are washed between uses.[14]

25/10/2022


Reduce your s*xual risk factors. You are less likely to become exposed to HIV if you do not have s*x, reduce the number of your s*xual partners, require s*xual partners to get tested for HIV, and/or limit your s*x to uninfected s*xual partners who do not have s*x outside your relationship. Choosing one or more of these s*xual practices is an excellent way to reduce the chance of HIV transmission, especially when combined with condom use as described below.
Have long-term s*xual partners get tested for HIV before you have s*x without a condom. A significant percentage of people with HIV do not know they have the virus.[6]

Prevent exchange of bodily fluids during s*x. HIV can be transmitted through oral, va**nal, or a**l s*x if one or more people involved are HIV+. However, there are ways to reduce, but not eliminate, the chance of its transmission. Always use latex condoms or latex female condoms when having s*x with a new s*xual partner, any s*xual partner who has not been recently tested for HIV, or during every s*xual encounter if you have multiple s*xual partners. When performing oral s*x on a va**na or a**s, use dental dams or non-lubricated, cut-open condoms for oral s*x to prevent direct contact with the mouth.
Warning: lambskin condoms do not prevent infection, as they contain microscopic holes that the virus can travel through. Polyurethane condoms may not prevent infection as effectively as latex condoms.[7]

25/10/2022

Autism: Causes, Epidemiology, Treatment and Prevention.
Definition
Autism, or autism spectrum disorder, refers to a range of conditions characterized by challenges with social skills, repetitive behaviors, speech and nonverbal communication, as well as by unique strengths and differences. We now know that there is not one autism but many types, caused by different combinations of genetic and environmental influences. The term “spectrum” reflects the wide variation in challenges and strengths possessed by each person with autism.

Types of autism
There are four main sub-types of autism recognized within the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

Autistic Disorder, also known as autism, childhood autism, early infantile autism, Kanner’s syndrome or infantile psychosis. People with autistic disorder usually have significant language delays, social and communication challenges, and unusual behaviors and interests. Many people with autistic disorder also have intellectual disability.
Asperger Syndrome, also known as Asperger’s disorder or simply Asperger’s. People with Asperger syndrome usually have some milder symptoms of autistic disorder. They might have social challenges and unusual behaviors and interests. However, they typically do not have problems with language or intellectual disability.
Childhood Disintegrative Disorder, also known as CDD, dementia infantalis, disintegrative psychosis or Heller’s syndrome. These children develop normally for at least two years and then lose some or most of their communication and social skills. This is an extremely rare disorder and its existence as a separate condition is a matter of debate among many mental health professionals.
Pervasive Developmental Disorder-Not otherwise Specified, also known as PDD (NOS) or atypical autism.
How common is Autism?
Autism statistics from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released in March 2014 identify around 1 in 68 American children as on the autism spectrum – a ten-fold increase in prevalence in 40 years. Careful research shows that this increase is only partly explained by improved diagnosis and awareness. Studies also show that autism is four to five times more common among boys than girls. An estimated 1 out of 42 boys and 1 in 189 girls are diagnosed with autism in the United States.

ASD affects over 2 million individuals in the U.S. and tens of millions worldwide. Moreover, government autism statistics suggest that prevalence rates have increased 10% to 17% annually in recent years. There is no established explanation for this continuing increase, although improved diagnosis and environmental influences are two reasons often considered.

Historical background about ASDs
The term Autism comes from the Greek word “autos,” meaning “self”. Eugen Bleuler coined the word “autism” in 1908 among severely withdrawn schizophrenic patients.
In 1943 American child psychiatrist Leo Kanner studied 11 children. The children had features of difficulties in social interactions, difficulty in adapting to changes in routines, good memory, sensitivity to stimuli (especially sound), resistance and allergies to food, good intellectual potential, echolalia or propensity to repeat words of the speaker and difficulties in spontaneous activity.
In 1944 Hans Asperger, working separately, studied a group of children. His children also resembled Kanner’s descriptions. The children he studied, however, did not have echolalia as a linguistic problem but spoke like grownups. He also mentioned that many of the children were clumsy and different from normal children in terms of fine motor skills.
Next Bruno Bettelheim studied the effect of three therapy sessions with children who he called autistic. He claimed that the problem in the children was due to coldness of their mothers. He separated the children from their parents. Kanner and Bettelheim both worked towards making hypothesis that showed autistic children had frigid mothers
Bernard Rimland was a psychologist and parent of a child with autism. He disagreed with Bettelheim. He did not agree that the cause of his son’s autism was due to either his or his wife’s parenting skills. In 1964, Bernard Rimland published, Infantile Autism: The Syndrome and its Implications for a Neural Theory of Behavior.
Autism came to be better known in the 1970’s. The Erica Foundation started education and therapy for psychotic children in the beginning of the 80s. Many parents still confused autism with mental retardation and psychosis.
It was in 1980’s that Asperger’s work was translated to English and published and came into knowledge.
It was in the 1980’s that research on autism gained momentum. It was increasingly believed that parenting had no role in causation of autism and there were neurological disturbances and other genetic ailments like tuberous sclerosis, metabolic disturbances like PKU or chromosomal abnormalities like fragile X syndrome.
Lorna Wing, along with Christopher Gillberg at BNK (Children’s Neuro-Psychiatric Clinic) in Sweden in the 1980’s found the Wing’s triad of disturbed mutual contact, disturbed mutual communication and limited imagination. In the 1990’s they added another factor making it a square. The factor was limited planning ability.
Ole Ivar Lovaas studied and furthered behavioural a**lysis and treatment of children with autism. Lovaas achieved limited success at first with his experimental behaviour a**lysis. He developed it to target younger children (less than 5 years of age) and implemented treatment at home and increased the intensity (a measurement of the amount of “therapy time”) to about 40 hours weekly. Lovaas wrote Teaching Developmentally Disabled Children: The Me Book in 1981. In 2002, Lovaas wrote, Teaching Individuals with Developmental Delays: Basic Intervention Techniques.
Signs and symptoms of ASDs
People with ASDs may have problems with social, emotional, and communication skills. They might repeat certain behaviors and might not want change in their daily activities. Many people with ASDs also have different ways of learning, paying attention, or reacting to things. ASDs begin during early childhood and last throughout a person’s life.

A child or adult with an ASD might have:

Not play “pretend” games (pretend to “feed” a doll)
Not point at objects to show interest (point at an airplane flying over)
Not look at objects when another person points at them
Have trouble relating to others or not have an interest in other people at all
Avoid eye contact and want to be alone
Have trouble understanding other people’s feelings or talking about their own feelings
Prefer not to be held or cuddled or might cuddle only when they want to
Appear to be unaware when other people talk to them but respond to other sounds
Be very interested in people, but not know how to talk, play, or relate to them
Repeat or echo words or phrases said to them, or repeat words or phrases in place of normal language (echolalia)
Have trouble expressing their needs using typical words or motions
Repeat actions over and over again
Have trouble adapting when a routine changes
Have unusual reactions to the way things smell, taste, look, feel, or sound
Lose skills they once had (for instance, stop saying words they were using)
Causes of Autism
There’s no one cause of autism. Research suggests that autism develops from a combination of genetic and non-genetic, or environmental, influences. These influences appear to increase the risk that a child will develop autism.

Autism’s genetic risk factors: Changes in certain genes increase the risk that a child will develop autism. If a parent carries one or more of these gene changes, they may get passed to a child (even if the parent does not have autism).
Autism’s environmental risk factors: certain environmental influences may further increase – or reduce – autism risk in people who are genetically predisposed to the disorder. Importantly, the increase or decrease in risk appears to be small for any one of these risk factors:
Advanced parent age (either parent)
Pregnancy and birth complications (e.g. extreme prematurity [before 26 weeks], low birth weight, multiple pregnancies [twin, triplet, etc.]).
Use of alcohol
Maternal metabolic conditions such as diabetes and obesity
Use of anti-seizure drugs during pregnancy
Untreated phenylketonuria (called PKU, an inborn metabolic disorder caused by the absence of an enzyme)
Rubella (German measles)
Diagnosis of ASDs
Diagnosing autism spectrum disorder (ASD) can be difficult, since there is no medical test, like a blood test, to diagnose the disorders. Doctors look at the child’s behavior and development to make a diagnosis.
ASD can sometimes be detected at 18 months or younger. By age 2, a diagnosis by an experienced professional can be considered very reliable. Diagnosing an ASD takes two steps:
Developmental Screening
Comprehensive Diagnostic Evaluation
Developmental Screening
Developmental screening is a short test to tell if children are learning basic skills when they should, or if they might have delays. During developmental screening the doctor might ask the parent some questions or talk and play with the child during an exam to see how she learns, speaks, behaves, and moves. A delay in any of these areas could be a sign of a problem.

All children should be screened for developmental delays and disabilities during regular well-child doctor visits at:

9 months
18 months
24 or 30 months
Additional screening might be needed if a child is at high risk for developmental problems due to preterm birth, low birth weight or other reasons. In addition, all children should be screened specifically for ASD during regular well-child doctor visits at:

18 months
24 months
Other lab tests may be done under specific circumstances. These tests include:

Chromosomal a**lysis, which may be done if intellectual disability is present or there is a family history of intellectual disability. For example, fragile X syndrome, which causes a range of below-normal intelligence problems as well as autistic-like behaviors, can be identified with a chromosomal a**lysis.
An electroencephalograph (EEG), which is done if there are symptoms of seizures
MRI, which may be done if there are signs of differences in the structure of the brain.
Treatment of ASDs
Applied behavioral a**lysis (ABA)
This intervention works by breaking down skills like communication and cognitive skills into smaller and simpler tasks. The tasks are then taught in a highly structured way. The simple tasks over time coalesce into more complex skills that help in development.

Early start Denver model
This is yet another behavioral intervention that combines applied behavioral a**lysis with developmental and relationship based approaches. The child is brought into interactive social relationships, using positive emotional exchanges and joint play activities. It improves cognitive, language and adaptive behavioral skills.

Discrete Trial Training (DTT)
This is a style of teaching that uses a series of trials and efforts to teach each step of a desired behavior or response.

Pivotal Response Training (PRT)
This is intended to increase the child’s motivation to learn and monitor his or her own behaviour and begin communication.

Verbal Behavior Intervention (VBI)
VBI is a type of ABA that focuses on teaching verbal skills.

Speech and language therapy (SLT)
This therapy aims at improving communication and language skills. This can improve their ability to interact with others socially. This intervention may use visual aids, stories and toys and other aids to develop language skills.

Occupational therapy
This focuses on development and maintenance of fine motor and adaptive skills.

Stem cell therapy

Medicines
Medicines are most commonly used to treat related conditions and problem behaviors, including depression, anxiety, hyperactivity, and obsessive-compulsive behaviors.

Prevention
Although the exact cause of autism is not known in most instances, some cases are linked to chemical exposure during pregnancy. Therefore, it is essential to avoid taking any drugs during pregnancy unless the doctor specifically prescribes them.
It also is essential to avoid drinking alcoholic beverages of any kind during pregnancy. Being immunized against rubella (German measles) before becoming pregnant can prevent rubella-associated autism.
Following delivery, there are certain measures that may be helpful in preventing autism. One is early diagnosis and treatment of phenylketonuria (PKU). This is a hereditary disease that is caused by the lack of a liver enzyme required to digest the enzyme phenylalanine.
Similarly, early diagnosis and treatment of celiac disease may reduce the risk of a child having autism.

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