Speech and language difficulties can have many causes, including an undetected hearing impairment, poor oral muscle tone or coordination or a neurological disorder like Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism, or apraxia, a breakdown in the transmission of messages from the brain to the muscles in the jaw, cheeks, lips, tongue and palate.
The parents of a bright man I know who said nothing, not even "Mommy" or "Daddy," before age 3, were told by child development specialists in 1970 that their son was perfectly normal. Once he started talking, he spoke in full, complex sentences. But years later he received a diagnosis of Asperger's syndrome, which severely impairs his ability to relate to others.
I'm confused. Here I thought that AS meant no significant language delay. If you're not speaking until three, shouldn't you get a diagnosis of HFA?
(I am NOT getting into the discussion of whether or not this is a valid separation. I'm just asking a question by the diagnostic criteria as they stand right now)
The parents of a bright man I know who said nothing, not even "Mommy" or "Daddy," before age 3, were told by child development specialists in 1970 that their son was perfectly normal. Once he started talking, he spoke in full, complex sentences. But years later he received a diagnosis of Asperger's syndrome, which severely impairs his ability to relate to others.
I'm confused. Here I thought that AS meant no significant language delay. If you're not speaking until three, shouldn't you get a diagnosis of HFA?
(I am NOT getting into the discussion of whether or not this is a valid separation. I'm just asking a question by the diagnostic criteria as they stand right now)
no subject
Date: 2004-06-08 05:26 pm (UTC)