A major register study from Karolinska Institutet shows
that children born to certain groups of immigrants had an increased risk
of developing autism with intellectual disability. The study includes
all children in Stockholm County from 2001 to 2007, and brings the
question of the heredity of autism to the fore.
"This is an intriguing discovery, in which we can see strong links between a certain kind of autism and the time of the mother's immigration to Sweden," says principal investigator Cecilia Magnusson,
Associate Professor of epidemiology at Karolinska Institutet. "The study
is important, as it shows that autism isn't governed only by genetic causes but by environmental factors too."The study, which is published in the scientific periodical The British Journal of Psychiatry shows that children of immigrant parents, particularly from countries of low human development, are disproportionately likely to develop autism with intellectual disability, a connection that appears to be related to the timing of migration rather than complications in childbirth. Children, whose mothers migrated just before or during pregnancy, ran the highest risk of all.
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