BEIJING, May 6 (Xinhuanet) -- Having a parent with
psychiatric problems doubles a child's odds of being autistic, researchers said
in a study released on Monday.
Doctors found that rates of autism rose substantially
if parents had suffered schizophrenia, depression or a range of other
personality and psychiatric disorders.
"Our research shows that mothers and fathers
diagnosed with schizophrenia were about twice as likely to have a child
diagnosed with autism," said Julie Daniels of the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, who worked on the study published in the May issue of Pediatrics.
"We also saw higher rates of depression and
personality disorders among mothers, but not fathers," she said in a statement.
Researchers, led by Julie Daniels at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, examined the medical records of 1,237 children
in Sweden born between 1977 and 2003 who were diagnosed with autism before the
age of 10. They were compared with families of nearly 31,000 children who did
not have autism.
The study confirms previous, smaller studies that
found that psychiatric disorders were more common among blood relations of
people with autism. A strong genetic component is suspected for autism, a
developmental disorder.
"This study might help us pinpoint some more genetic
ties to more cases [of autism]," added Daniels.
(Agencies)