For a while now we’ve been discussing and speculating about Autism and its link to Celiac Disease. According to a recent study, it looks like there is now finally medical research that supports Autism’s link to Celiac, as well as other autoimmune diseases, including Type 1 Diabetes and Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Although the association between autism and a maternal history of type 1 diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis had been found in earlier research, the researchers behind the new study say that theirs is the first to find a link between autism and celiac disease.
According to Forbes:
“This finding reinforces the suggestion that autoimmune processes are connected somehow with the cause of autism and autism spectrum disorder,” said researcher William W. Eaton, chairman of the Department of Mental Health at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University. “This finding is on the pathway of finding the cause of autism.”
Eaton noted that there is no clinical significance to the finding but that it could guide future research as scientists try to pin down the cause or causes of autism.
One reason autoimmune diseases might have a role in autism is genetic, Eaton said. Children who are born underweight or premature are at higher risk for autism, and both of these obstetric problems are associated with celiac disease, he added.
“There may be an overlap in the genetics of some of the autoimmune diseases and autism that would not be trivial,” he said. “Autism is strongly inherited, but we don’t have the faintest idea where. But this may point a flashlight to areas of the genome that connect to autism.”
In addition, there might also be environmental triggers that affect the fetus, he said.
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