MONDAY, July 19 (HealthDay News) -- As many parents of autistic
children can attest, youngsters with the disorder are often slower to eat
solid foods and become pickier eaters as they get older, new research
shows.
However, the good news from the study is that the nutrition and growth
of these kids typically doesn't seem to suffer.
Problems with eating can emerge as early as infancy in children with
autism and can become more pronounced with age, the study authors
found.
Researchers collected data on the eating habits of nearly 13,000
children born in southwest England in 1991-92. Children were tracked from
birth, and their parents filled out questionnaires about their youngsters'
eating habits.
About 80 children were later diagnosed with an autism spectrum
disorder, a neurodevelopmental condition that appears in the first three
years of life and is characterized by impaired social interaction and
communication and restricted or repetitive behavior.
Parents of children later diagnosed with autism were more likely to
report their children had feeding difficulties between 15 months and 54
months old, including being "very difficult to feed," "very choosy," or
eating non-food objects, a disorder called pica.
For example, parents whose children were later diagnosed with autism
reported that at 6 months of age their children had later acceptance of
solid foods and took longer to eat than children without the disorder.
As kids reached 15 months, about 8 percent of parents of autistic kids
reported their children were "very difficult to feed," compared to about 3
percent of kids without autism.
And for kids between the ages of 4 and 5, about 26 percent of parents
said their autistic children were very difficult to feed, compared to 10
percent of youngsters without the disorder.
Autistic kids were also pickier eaters. At 15 months old, 9.5 percent
of parents of kids later diagnosed with autism considered their children
"very choosy," compared to 5.4 percent of parents of kids without
autism.
Between 4 and 5 years old, 37.5 percent of parents of autistic kids
said their child was "very choosy," compared to about 14 percent of the
parents of other kids.
Yet despite the challenges parents may face in getting their autistic
children to eat a balanced diet, researchers found no differences in the
height, weight or body mass index (BMI) of kids with autism compared to
their non-autistic peers at age 7.
Autistic children ate fewer vegetables, salads and fresh fruit than
other children, but they also consumed fewer sweets and soda, the study
team found.
And an analysis of reported food intake showed autistic children and
non-autistic children consumed similar amounts of calories, fats, proteins
and carbohydrates.
Aside from small differences in levels of vitamins C and D, autistic
and non-autistic children were getting similar amounts of important
nutrients. Autistic children's levels of hemoglobin, or iron, in the blood
were slightly lower, but not enough to be statistically significant.
Taken together, parents of children with an autism spectrum disorder
should breathe easier about their child's eating habits, said study
co-author Pauline Emmett, a nutritionist at University of Bristol in
England.
"Although children with autism spectrum disorders are more difficult to
feed and they eat less variety of foods, this is not affecting the
nutrients of their diet, their height, weight or BMI," Emmett said. "There
doesn't seem to be any major cause for concern."
The study is published in the July 19 online issue of
Pediatrics.
Experts who treat children with autism often hear stories of parents
having trouble around mealtime, said Geraldine Dawson, chief science
officer for Autism Speaks. The problem is so prevalent most autism centers
have a nutritional expert who evaluates kids' eating habits.
One challenge is that many autistic children have a strong need for
consistent routine or "sameness," Dawson said, which can cause anxiety
when asked to try new foods. Children with autism can also have sensory
sensitivities, causing aversions to certain textures or tastes.
Some autistic children have motor delays that can cause problems eating
or swallowing.
And although the underlying causes are poorly understood, autism is
also associated with gastrointestinal problems, such as constipation and
diarrhea, leading some kids to avoid eating.
In the study, some 8 percent of parents reported that their children
were on a special "allergy" diet, compared to about 2 percent of other
kids. Though there was no other information collected about what the
allergy might be, many parents put their children on diets free of gluten
(wheat) and casein (dairy). There is little evidence it helps ease
symptoms, according to recent studies.
One strength of the findings, Dawson said, is that parents were queried
about their children's diets prior to an autism diagnosis, reducing the
chances of bias in describing their child's behavior. The median age of
diagnosis was just under 4 years.
"The eating difficulties appear to start very early and seem to be
pretty inherent in the syndrome for many kids," Dawson said.
Dawson agreed with the researchers' suggestion that children who have
persistent feeding difficulties may need to be screened for autism.
More information The
U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke has more on autism.
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