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re:[QUOTE][b]下面引用由[u]秋爸...
下面引用由秋爸爸发表的内容:
这十大进展中,不少在论坛里去年都曾有过即时报道帖。
http://www.autismspeaks.org/images/science/science_news/d_201101_TopTen...
Gastrointestinal concerns addressed with new clinical guidelines
ASD肠道问题的《共识报告》出台,ASD与NT的在肠道问题上无异,不支持禁食等治疗手段,但因为ASD的社交障碍,其肠胃疾患容易被忽视,需关注。
第10点的解释原文在这里。QBB翻译的中文在原文中找不到啊!如果是你的理解,请注明QBB的“品牌”,免得误导哈! [EM15]
Gastrointestinal concerns addressed with new clinical guidelines
New guidelines help parents advocate for their children with GI problems
Gastrointestinal (GI) problems are a commonly expressed concern of parents of children with ASD, but there remains a significant need for clinical guidance and research in this area. In January 2010, a consensus statement and recommendations for the evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment of GI disorders in children with ASD were published in Pediatrics. These recommendations are an important step in advancing physician awareness of the unique challenges in the medical management of children with autism and will be a another step towards the development of evidence-based guidelines that will standardize care for all children with ASD. The reports highlighted the crucial need for information to guide care, and emphasized the importance of fostering more research in this area to support the development of these guidelines.
The consensus statement highlights several important themes, the first emphasizing that GI problems are a genuine concern in the ASD population and that these disorders exacerbate or contribute to problem behaviors. The need for awareness of how GI problems manifest in children with autism and the potential for accompanying nutritional complications and impaired quality of life were also emphasized. In the second paper, the authors make consensus recommendations providing guidance for current general pediatric standards of care that can and should be used by those treating children with ASD.
Autism Speaks is already engaged in the next step which is to move beyond these consensus-based recommendations to develop evidence-based clinical guidelines through the work of the members of its Autism Treatment Network (www.autismspeaks.org/airp.), a program addressing co-morbid medical conditions in the ASD population. George Fuchs, M.D., a co-author on the two papers and chair of Autism Speaks' ATN GI Committee remarked, “The recommendations provide important guidance for the clinician to adapt the current practices of care (for abdominal pain, chronic constipation and gastroesophageal reflux) for the child with autism. The recommendations complement the ATN's on-going work to develop evidence-based, ASD-specific guidelines. The ATN is currently piloting newly created guidelines and monitoring their effectiveness. We anticipate this data will contribute to an evidence-based foundation to support best practices for GI problems in ASD.”
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