Monday, December 14, 2020

Vitamin D Could Explain Why Autism Is Three Times More Common in Boys - Another Maybe for Families

A friend just shared this article with me, along with a note that read "Does this many any sense to you?"  As a mom who as been following and reading scientific and anecdotical explanations for autism for the past 19 years, my answer is "Sure, why not?"  Sadly, despite all the reports and studies over the years our kids are still not better off. We still do not have a cure, and we still live in a space where the only thing we know for sure works are intervention therapy's.  


When I began this journey with my son and believed it would get sorted in ten years or so and every new discovery excited me. I now know that is not the case. We still have no idea what causes Autism or what could cure it. My family like millions of others is still working in the dark implementing the tools available to us, praying every step of the way for progress.  So, whenever I read another scientific study, I no longer get excited and imagine a cure in coming. The years have depleted my enthusiasm, but not my hope. That is why with each new report I remain open, because until we know anything for sure, everything is "Sure why not!" 


Vitamin D Could Explain Why Autism Is Three Times More Common in Boys

Infant Baby Hand

A deficiency in vitamin D on the mother’s side could explain why autism spectrum disorder is three times more common in boys, say Queensland Brain Institute researchers.

In their latest study, Professor Darryl Eyles and Dr. Asad Ali found vitamin D deficiency during pregnancy caused an increase in testosterone in the developing brain of male rats.

Increase in testosterone in the brain 

“The biological cause of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is unknown but we have shown that one of the many risk factors—low vitamin D in mothers—causes an increase in testosterone in the brain of the male fetuses, as well as the maternal blood and amniotic fluid,” Professor Eyles said.

“In addition to its role in calcium absorption, vitamin D is crucial to many developmental processes.

“Our research also showed that in vitamin D-deficient male fetuses, an enzyme which breaks down testosterone was silenced and could be contributing to the presence of high testosterone levels.”

Vitamin D is critical in brain development

Professor Eyles’ previous research has shown that vitamin D plays a critical role in brain development and that giving vitamin D supplements to mice during pregnancy completely prevented autism-like traits in their offspring.

Co-author Dr. Ali said that excessive exposure of the developing brain to sex hormones like testosterone was thought to be an underlying cause of ASD, but the reasons remained unclear.

“Vitamin D is involved in pathways controlling many sex hormones,” Dr. Ali said.

“When the rat mothers were fed a low vitamin D diet, it caused male fetal brains to have high levels of exposure to testosterone.”

Time to study more risk factors for ASD

Professor Eyles said the study was the first to show that a known risk factor for ASD alters testosterone in both the fetal brain and the mother’s blood — one possible contributor to why ASD is more prevalent in males.

“We have only studied one risk factor for ASD — vitamin D deficiency during development — our next step is to look at other possible risk factors, such as maternal stress and hypoxia – lack of oxygen – and see if they have the same effect,” he said.

Reference: “Developmental vitamin D deficiency increases foetal exposure to testosterone” by Asad Amanat Ali, Xiaoying Cui, Renata Aparecida Nedel Pertile, Xiang Li, Gregory Medley, Suzanne Adele Alexander, Andrew J. O. Whitehouse, John Joseph McGrath and Darryl Walter Eyles, 10 December 2020, Molecular Autism.
DOI: 10.1186/s13229-020-00399-2

This research is published in Molecular Autism and was a collaboration with The University of Western Australia’s Dr Andrew Whitehouse and funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council Australia and Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research.

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