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Autistic children demonstrate measurable sound processing delays

By Christiana Schmitz | December 1, 2008

Magnetoencephalography technology used to study abnormalities in auditory and language processing of autistic children has demonstrated measurable delays, according to a study presented at the RSNA meeting.

The study, funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation, subjected 64 autism patients, aged six to 15, to audio stimulation in the forms of beeps, tones in pairs, vowels, and sentences. It compared the audio processing time of these children with a control group of age-matched nonautistic children and found a significant delay in processing time.

"It's the real-time nature of this technology that gives us some significant insights," said presenter Timothy Roberts, Ph.D., vice chair of research in the radiology department at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

Magnetoencephalography (MEG) enabled researchers to detect delays in the pattern of audio processing of autistic children and to quantify and track these delays. Autistic children, for example, were on average 20 msec late in processing the sound of a beep. These brief latencies create a cascade of delays, leading to abnormal processing of auditory stimuli, Roberts said.

In using vowels as audio stimulus, researchers found that autistic children not only processed sounds more slowly but also processed a change in detection of sound more slowly, with an average of 35 to 50-msec delays.

"The result is a significant delay in the simplest hearing detection task across all of the children with autism," Roberts said. "Signals that move in one area of the brain move more slowly -- they're stuck in traffic."

Although there are only 100 MEG centers worldwide, researchers hope to continue their study of auditory and language processing in autistic children. The results of such studies could help classify different types of autism and could even affect therapy.

In the future, such studies could detect autism as early as the age at which infants begin processing language, Roberts said. This could have enormous impacts on treatment, perhaps using the technology to slow audio input to autistic infants, helping them to hear and process language the way nonautistic babies would.

Already, MEG technology has successfully made recordings of an 18-month-old baby.

 

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RSNA 2008 December 1

Elastography breaks new ground in musculoskeletal imaging
December 1, 2008

Researchers from Egypt and Austria are taking a leap of faith to evaluate several possible ultrasound elastography applications in musculoskeletal radiology. Everyone from weekend warriors to elite athletes may benefit if the test is proven effective, according to papers released Monday at the RSNA meeting.

Autistic children demonstrate measurable sound processing delays
December 1, 2008

Magnetoencephalography technology used to study abnormalities in auditory and language processing of autistic children has demonstrated measurable delays, according to a study presented at the RSNA meeting.

MRA explains benefits of exercise for aging adults
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Doctors have known for years that aerobic exercise counteracts the effects of aging on the human brain. Findings presented at the RSNA meeting contributed to an explanation of why.

Thin-slice CT tags subsegmental pulmonary emboli in oncology patients
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Oncology patients have a fourfold risk above the general population of developing pulmonary embolism. If the patient is receiving chemotherapy, the risk is even greater. Irish radiologists have found that imaging these patients with thin-slice CT during routine staging or restaging can pinpoint clinically unsuspected pulmonary embolism.

Brachytherapy improves cancer treatment in augmented breasts
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Targeted radiation of breast cancer reduces treatment time from six and a half weeks to five days, while reducing pain and improving cosmetic outcome, according to a study presented at the RSNA meeting.

Older radiologists read more mammograms than younger generation
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In Pennsylvania, radiologists 65 and older read significantly more mammograms than any other group, according to an American College of Radiology patterns-of-care study.

Sony shows mammo printer
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Sony has unveiled at RSNA 2008 a printer designed specifically for digital mammography.

GE, Philips fuse ultrasound data with CT and MR
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Interventional guidance is getting a boost at RSNA 2008 through a novel ultrasound system developed by GE Healthcare and a partnership between Philips Ultrasound and interventional workstation developer Traxtal.

Younger ER pulmonary embolism patients could avoid radiation risk
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More stringent criteria to evaluate emergency room patients under 40 years of age with suspected pulmonary embolism could decrease radiation exposure while also saving time and money, according to research presented at the RSNA meeting.

Trial finds digital mammography performs better than film
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Digital mammography is more accurate than film for diagnosis of breast cancer in women with dense breasts, according to results from the Digital Mammographic Imaging Screening Trial presented at the RSNA meeting.

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