Psychiatric News
Journal Home Search Current Issue Past Issues Subscribe All APPI Journals Help Contact Us
 
Quicksearch
Advanced Search
Or Search All APPI Journals
Services
* Email this article to a Colleague
* Similar articles in this journal
* Alert me to new issues of the journal
* Download to citation manager
* reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
* Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
* Search for Related Content
Psychiatric News January 4, 2002
Volume 37 Number 1
© 2002 American Psychiatric Association
p. 18


Clinical & Research News

New Calif. Center to Investigate Link Between Autism, Environment

A center to study the possible complicity of environmental contaminants in autism is being established at the University of California at Davis.

There is ample suspicion among parents of children with autism, as well as among some physicians, that heavy metals or other environmental contaminants may play a causative role in autism (Psychiatric News, September 7, 2001).

Thus it should come as good news to them that a research center is being established expressly to probe such contaminants’ possible contributions to autism. It is the University of California at Davis Center for Children’s Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research.

The center is being bankrolled by a $5-million, five-year grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and by another $4 million from the University of California, Davis, and the university’s M.I.N.D. Institute over the next four years. The center’s staff will include researchers in environmental toxicology, epidemiology, immunology, and neurodevelopmental disorders.

The first project that the center will undertake is an environmental epidemiological study of 2,000 California children from 2 to 5 years of age. The study group will include 600 mentally normal children, 700 children with mental retardation but without autism, and 700 children with autism but not mental retardation.

Clinicians will measure the children’s cognitive and social skills, take family histories as well as histories of exposure to environmental toxins, and obtain blood and other biological samples. Clinicians in the department of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the University of California at Los Angeles will assist in the evaluations of potential subjects so that a geographically diverse group of urban, rural, and minority children will be included.

"This study will be the first major epidemiological, case-controlled study to examine autism in relation to a broad array of environmental exposures and endogenous susceptibility factors," David Amaral, Ph.D., a neuroscientist and co-principal investigator at the center, said in a press release.

More information about the research center can be found at the Web site http://news.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/environment_autism.html. {blacksquare}





Services
* Email this article to a Colleague
* Similar articles in this journal
* Alert me to new issues of the journal
* Download to citation manager
* reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
* Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
* Search for Related Content


Get information about faster international access.

Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2002 American Psychiatric Association. All rights reserved.

Home | Search | Current Issue | Past Issues | Subscribe | All APPI Journals | Help | Contact Us

American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. American Psychiatric Association
1000 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 1825, Arlington, VA 22209-3901 * 800-368-5777 * appi at psych.org