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Asperger

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Simone Shamay-Tsoory. Haifa University. Specific characteristics of NVLD (I) ... Emotional problems: poor understanding ... SIMONE'S BATTERY administered (ToM) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Asperger


1
Aspergers Syndrome and NVLD cognitive and
emotional profiles
  • Shoshana Yaniv
  • Cognitive Neurology Unit
  • Rambam

Simone Shamay-Tsoory Haifa University
2
Specific characteristics of NVLD (I)
  1. Social problems poor peer relations
    inappropriate behavior difficulty understanding
    social situations gravitate toward older/younger
    playmates
  2. Emotional problems poor understanding of
    emotional signals from others difficulty
    interpreting personal emotional experience
    inability to learn from past experience including
    social interaction risk for depression and
    isolation
  3. Cognitive characteristics well-developed verbal
    abilities visuo-spatial and visuo-motor
    deficits poor handwriting difficulty with
    part-whole relationships and organizing
    information serious arithmetic problems, poor
    adjustment to change significant differences in
    Performance IQ vs. Verbal IQ with VIQ being better

3
Specific characteristics of NVLD (II)
  1. Motor problems left-sided symptoms on
    neuropsychological testing
  2. Attention problems distractibility difficulty
    concentrating, difficulty inhibiting input,
    behavior etc. can make them look hyperactive
    although typically not hyperactive but NVLD can
    co-occur with ADHD

4
Asperger Syndrome (DSM-IV) (I)
  • Qualitative impairment in social interaction, as
    manifested by at least two of the following
  • (1) marked impairment in the use of multiple
    nonverbal behaviors such as eye-to-eye gaze,
    facial expression, and gestures to regulate
    social interaction
  • (2) failure to develop peer relationships
    appropriate to developmental level
  • (3) a lack of spontaneous seeking to share
    enjoyment, interests, or achievements with other
    people (e.g. lack of showing, bringing, or
    pointing out objects of interest to other people)

5
Asperger Syndrome (DSM-IV) (II)
  • Restricted, repetitive, and stereotyped patterns
    of behavior, interests, and activities, as
    manifested by at least one of the following
  • (1) encompassing preoccupation with one or more
    stereotyped and restricted patterns of interest
    that is abnormal either in intensity or focus
  • (2) apparently, inflexible adherence to
    specific, nonfunctional routines or rituals
  • (3) stereotyped and repetitive motor mannerisms
    (e.g. hand or finger, flapping or twisting, or
    complex wholebody movements)
  • (4) persistent preoccupation with parts of
    objects

6
Asperger Syndrome (DSM-IV) (III)
  • The disturbance causes clinically significant
    impairment in social, occupational, or other
    important areas of functioning
  • There is no clinically significant delay in
    language (e.g. single words used by age 2yrs,
    communicative phrases by age 3yrs)
  • There is no clinically significant delay in
    cognitive development or in the development of
    age-appropriate self-help skills, adaptive
    behavior (other than social interaction), and
    curiosity about the environment in childhood
  • Criteria are not met for another specific
    pervasive developmental disorder or schizophrenia

7
Apples and Oranges
  • NVLD is based on cognitive criteria/ NP construct
  • AS is a disorder of social cognition and
    behavior/ psychiatric construct
  • On the same continuum/different syndromes/ NVLD
    non-existent?
  • NVLD has a definite NP profile
  • AS no definite NP profile (?)
  • AS seems genetic/NVLD no
  • Different gender ratios
  • AS deficits explained by new evidence/theories

8
History of Dana
  • Psychiatric hospitalization following severe
    destructive behavior, psychosis R/O
  • Referred for NP assessment by hospital staff
  • 83 y., slow motor development, early language
  • Symbolic play, eye contact, imitation-ok
  • Social difficulties/severe tantrums
  • Medical Hx febrile convulsions
  • School Hx underachieving, slow/poor writing
    reading comprehension, poor arithmetic, slowness,
    disorganized, attention issues

9
NP profile
  • High IQ
  • General difficulty processing and integrating
    complex information
  • Analytic, detail oriented
  • Visual-spatial deficits
  • Poor arithmetic
  • Slow motor output
  • Poor EF (attention, planning, shifting)
  • Poor adjustment/behavior

FILLS NVLD CRITERIA
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15
Dana-after testing
  • Neurological workup MRI, SPECT- ok
  • EEG- abnormal Rt. Temporal activity
  • Psychotherapy (group individual), Remedial
    learning, OT, school /testing accommodations
  • Improvement reported 2 y., then contact lost

16
Dana - 2006
  • 175, 12th grade
  • Academic social difficulties
  • Irregular school attendance
  • Overweight, depressed
  • Slow, clumsy
  • Difficulty w/changes
  • NP profile high intelligence but uneven,
  • slow, difficulty w/complexity, detail oriented,
    cannot integrate, memory ok, no ADHD, depressed,
    anxious

SIMONES BATTERY administered (ToM)
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