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Doctors often diagnose children with attention deficit disorders, learning disabilities or bipolar disorder when their patients actually have Asperger's—a developmental disorder that inhibits the ability to socialize well with others.

Misdiagnosing the disorder prevents patients from receiving proper treatment and learning important skills for success in social settings, school and relationships. While a diagnosis can be made for Asperger's Disorder as early as 2 years old, most children are not diagnosed until they reach middle school or later (see sidebar for common characteristics of Asperger's Disorder).

"There is a huge confusion over what Asperger's is and what it isn't because it has only been diagnosed by the present criteria for the past 12 years,” says Dan Hoover, PhD, a psychologist with the Adolescent Treatment Program at The Menninger Clinic and associate professor in the Menninger Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences at Baylor College of Medicine. "Asperger's is over diagnosed by some clinicians who are looking for it, and missed by clinicians who don't know what to look for, or who do not want to give their patients the label of having Asperger's Disorder.”

A combination of environmental and genetic factors may contribute to the development of the disorder, but the exact cause is unknown. Mental health experts believe Asperger's disorder is similar to autism because it affects the areas of the brain that control communication. However, symptoms of Asperger's Disorder are not as severe as autism.

Children with Asperger's disorder may be highly intelligent and can communicate with others---they just don't do it well. They are preoccupied with special interests like trains, motors, dinosaurs or Internet gaming. They also often speak in an idiosyncratic style that is hard for outsiders to understand.

"Patients with Asperger's are limited in brain areas that enable people to understand subtle cues,” says Dr. Hoover, who treats individuals with the disorder. "They don't reciprocate in conversation and tend to lecture others about subjects, and they don't notice if the person who they are talking with looks bored or has no interest in the subject.”

Because children with Asperger's disorder can't communicate well, they seem odd and may be singled out for ridicule among their peers. Over time, because of their negative experience with people, patients with Asperger's disorder distrust others and seek further isolation. Many people may misinterpret their behavior as rudeness, when in actuality, "almost everyone with Asperger's wants to relate to others,” Dr. Hoover says, adding that patients with Asperger's become depressed or act out when they can't connect with other people or make friends.

While there is no cure for Asperger's, people with the disorder can learn social skills to help them better relate to people. Some therapists recommend patients use scripts that spell out exactly what to do and say in a social situation. Therapists and parents may also encourage children with Asperger's to dress in a way that helps them fit in rather than stand out. Persons with Asperger's often dress oddly, for example in mismatched or unfashionable clothes.

Antidepressants can help patients with Asperger's deal with the depression that commonly accompanies the disorder. Physicians and psychiatrists may also prescribe attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) stimulant medications to help patients with their impulsivity or disorganization, or antipsychotic medications for patients who act out or who are irritable and aggressive.

Patients diagnosed early with Asperger's do best at learning how to adapt to their disorder, Dr. Hoover says. Parents who are concerned that their child may have symptoms of Asperger's should schedule a visit with a trained child psychologist or psychiatrist to rule out other behavioral or psychiatric disorders.

"Many people think that patients with Asperger's are stuck that way, but I have seen real change in some of the patients I have treated,” Dr. Hoover says. "A big part of getting better is knowing what Asperger's is and doing something about it.”

From healthnewsdigest.com
Thank you for posting this Amy.  My brother had Hyperactive diagnoses when we were children . . and even today.  Dr. R. Schnurr in Ottawa, Ontario says that it often masks AS.  We need to be more sensitive to this.
"Asperger's Disorder"? This dickhead doctor doesn't even know the proper name of our condition (Asperger syndrome) and he thinks he's such an expert on it that he disputes other doctors' diagnoses!

Think about it. "Asperger's Disorder" couldn't possibly be a proper medical name as it makes it sound as though Hans Asperger was autistic himself. This doctor must be really stupid to have not realized this.

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Antidepressants can help patients with Asperger's deal with the depression that commonly accompanies the disorder. Physicians and psychiatrists may also prescribe attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) stimulant medications to help patients with their impulsivity or disorganization, or antipsychotic medications for patients who act out or who are irritable and aggressive.

Gee, I'd rather be misdiagnosed, because if I were I probably wouldn't be made to take a shitload of clinically unjustified and potentially harmful pharmaceuticals. Tarditive dyskinesia is forever, and it's an very ugly thing to behold! I have a hard time believing that a practicing licenced medical doctor thinks risking causing a horrendous and permanent syndrome such as tarditive dyskinesia (or any of the other nasty side effects of anti-psychotics) is justified to treat someone being merely "irritable". If I took anti-psychotic drugs and got this permanent side effect I'd be worse than "irritable", I'd be suing!

And what about the comment about the clothing? Some of us like our "mismatched" and "out of fashion" outfits and I wonder how many other people don't like trying on lots of clothes in the shops because it is tiring and boring after a short while.

Lili Marlene Wrote:
"Tarditive dyskinesia is forever, and it's an very ugly thing to behold!


You may already be aware of this, the new anti-psychotics on the market have a much less substantial risk for causing Tardive Dyskinesia.

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You may already be aware of this, the new anti-psychotics on the market have a much less substantial risk for causing Tardive Dyskinesia.

And how often have you picked up a newspaper to read that a supposedly reputable and safe widely-used drug has belatedly been found to have unacceptable risks? The latest drug on that list is Voltaren, before that it was Vioxx, HRT therapy, ibuprofen, SSRIs and paediatric suicide risk, fenfluramine causing heart damage, ace inhibitors, benzodiazepine addiction, DES defects, thalidomide monstrosities etc etc .... If you believe the marketing hype from "big pharma" you're putting your own health in danger.

I was wrongly diagnosed for ADD, and then in third grade, when I had been expelled from my school for bad behavior, apparently my parents knew something was wrong, and went to a new doctor, and got the right diagnosis.

Lili Marlene Wrote:
"Asperger's Disorder"? This dickhead doctor doesn't even know the proper name of our condition (Asperger syndrome) and he thinks he's such an expert on it that he disputes other doctors' diagnoses!

Think about it. "Asperger's Disorder" couldn't possibly be a proper medical name as it makes it sound as though Hans Asperger was autistic himself. This doctor must be really stupid to have not realized this.


Well, it actually is technically "Asperger's Disorder" in the DSM IV. Look it up. Code 299.80.

You're right Mnemosyne. How quaint and insular the world of the DSM is! Most of the world, including the autism experts, use the term "Asperger syndrome" while the DSM calls just about everything a "disorder".

I Google the term "Asperger syndrome" and get 2,880,000 hits.
I Google the term "Asperger's disorder" and get 1,710,000 hits.

tenaciouscj Wrote:
And what about the comment about the clothing? Some of us like our "mismatched" and "out of fashion" outfits and I wonder how many other people don't like trying on lots of clothes in the shops because it is tiring and boring after a short while.


I quite agree about trying on clothes; it's a chore I avoid whenever possible!  I'm aware that I am "out of fashion" in my (very comfortable) elastic-waistbanded pants and hand-me-down T-shirts with holes in them, I just don't care! :razz:  I dress for comfort and low visual impact; if I want to be noticed, I say something intelligent and funny. :wink:

I was diagnosed with Schizoid Personality Disorder.  :razz:  

Of course that was in the early eighties.

I don't dress oddly although I'm tragically unfashionable.  :lol:
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