Maternal infection and autism


Prenatal viral infection has been called the principal non-genetic cause of autism. Prenatal exposure to rubella or cytomegalovirus activates the mother's immune response and greatly increases the risk for autism. Congenital rubella syndrome is the most convincing environmental cause. Infection-associated immunological events in early pregnancy may affect neural development more than infections in late pregnancy, not only for autism, but also for other psychiatric disorders of presumed neurodevelopmental origin, notably schizophrenia.Maternal infection and autism

The maternal antibody theory hypothesizes that immunoglobulin G (IgG) in a mother's blood can cross the placenta, enter into the fetus's brain, react against fetal brain proteins, and cause autism. The theory is related to the autoimmune disease hypothesis, except it focuses on maternal antibodies rather than the child's.

A 2008 study found that these antibodies bind to fetal brain cells, most commonly in mothers of children with regressive autism.

A 2008 study found that rhesus monkeys exposed during gestation to IgG from mothers of children with ASD demonstrated stereotypies, one of the three main symptoms of autism.

Maternal infection and autism
Pregnancy Birth Injury and Autism
Autism Books
Autism Checklist

 

Asperger's Syndrome in Laymens Terms. Aspergers Checklist
Autism Checklist
Autism Books
What causes autism spectrum disorders
Home, Education, Leisure, Work, Independence & Planning a Future
Autism and course of life
What are autism spectrum disorders?
Autism Diagnose
Autism Treatment and Intervention
Videos
Red Flags For Autism
Autism In The News
Contact Us
Site Map
More Health Related Sites
Other Sites
Sites
Links
Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Disclosure


Site Search