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By Richard | May 19, 2008
The Answers to Autism May Be Inside the Mind
ABCNews.com
On the front lines of autism treatment, things can get emotional, controversial and — sometimes — hopeful.
One doctor in California is arguing that trying to diagnose autism without looking at the brain is like trying to diagnose a heart condition without looking at the heart, though the established autism community isn’t so sure.
But for parents like Sarah Kavanagh, Dr. Fernando Miranda has changed their lives.
To be sure, Kavanagh would have had her hands full anyway. For the single mother of twin 6-year-old boys, Beckett and Webb, the days start early.
“Come on guys, let’s have some breakfast,” she shouts.
Beckett and his brother, Webb, come bounding out of bed smiling. It takes quite a while to get these two youngsters to arise from their slumber. But once they are up, the twins are ready for the day.
Beckett immediately runs to his dog, Wilson, an old English sheep dog, while mom prepares their morning meal.
“Breakfast,” yells Beckett, loud and clear.
For the last five years, Kavanagh has been struggling to get him to this point and it’s still hard for her to think back on the heartbreaking diagnosis she got when Beckett was 18 months old.
“They just watched him play in a room with a little kitchenette set and some stuffed animals and from that they deemed that he would be autistic,” she said, shaking her head. “I was shocked, devastated.”
Beckett always struggled with his speech, unlike his twin brother, Webb. More and more specialists gave her grim news about his condition.
“I heard everything from a resident telling me he would never advance beyond the intellect of an 18-month-old to the school district telling me he’d have to have a companion for the rest of his life,” Kavanagh said. MORE
Topics: Research |