Autism may be Chemically Linked

Posted by By at 4 August, at 18 : 29 PM Print

A new research suggests that the rising rate of autism diagnosis may be partly due to chemicals in the natural environment. As more and more chemicals are produced and used in every day products at unknown levels, it can be hard to say what is really out there and how it is reacting with children at a young age.

Currently, autism effects around 1 out of every 110 Americans, which continues to rise almost yearly. This is not just due to the disease spreading or taking a new form or getting more people. It simply is because there is so much more education about the disease, better tools to diagnose the children and a wider definition of the autism disorder itself.

The cost of treating an autistic child averages around $3.2 million over a lifetime, mostly due to specialized therapies and constant doctor visits and testing. Scientists and other are trying to reduce autism and frankly, find a cure for the disease, since there is no medicine that currently does anything to help.

Studies have strongly suggested a genetic component in the cause of autism, but it’s becoming clear that genetics alone isn’t the whole story; there could be interactions between susceptibility genes and environmental chemicals.

Bisphenol A, a chemical used in a lot of plastic products such as water bottles, can mess with a child’s estrogen system and other neurological systems. “That means that they could potentially play a role in autism or other developmental disorders,” Hertz-Piccotto said.

In addition, air pollution has been shown in studies to raise the rate of autistic children.

What the scientists are trying to really say is that we need to be careful of what we use in our products and what we put into the air, as it seems as though it is starting to cause real health epidemics across the world.

While people try to link this study with the vaccine cause of autism that was debunked, this is much different, as it deal with things directly in our environment.

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