Sensory symptoms associated with autistic traits and anxiety levels in children aged 6-11 years
2024 (English)In: Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders, E-ISSN 1866-1947, Vol. 16, no 1, article id 45Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
BackgroundAutism spectrum conditions (ASC) and quantitative autistic traits (QATs) are associated with sensory symptoms, which may contribute to anxiety and adversely affect social and cognitive development. Although sensory symptoms can occur across all senses, the relative roles of specific sensory modalities as contributors to the autistic phenotype and to anxiety are not well understood. The objective of this study was to examine which sensory symptoms were most predictive of high anxiety.MethodsWe recruited 257 female primary caregivers of children aged 6 to 11 years (49% girls) to a questionnaire study comprising parent-report measures for classical QATs (social, communicative, and rigid), autism-related sensorimotor symptoms (visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory, gustatory, vestibular, proprioceptive, and motor), and anxiety symptoms. First, Bayesian stochastic search variable selection (SSVS) was used to identify the most probable sensorimotor predictors of specific QATs as well as diagnosed ASC. Then, the selected predictors were used in another SSVS, using anxiety symptoms as a dependent variable, to identify which of the autism-relevant sensorimotor symptoms were most robustly predictive of anxiety. Finally, the effect sizes of anxiety-related sensory symptoms were estimated with linear regressions.ResultsWe found that auditory symptoms and motor difficulties were most predictive of ASC diagnosis. Developmental motor difficulties were also strongly related to all individual QATs, whereas auditory symptoms were more selectively predictive of rigid traits. Tactile symptoms robustly predicted social interaction QATs, and proprioceptive symptoms predicted communicative QATs. Anxiety outcomes were most strongly predicted by difficulties with auditory and olfactory processing.ConclusionsThe results support the clinical importance of being alert to complaints about sounds and hearing in neurodevelopmental populations, and that auditory processing difficulties may be evaluated as an early marker of poor mental health in children with and without diagnosed autism. Olfactory processing differences appeared to be an anxiety marker less strongly associated with ASC or QATs, while motor difficulties were highly autism-relevant but not equally strongly associated with anxiety outcomes. We suggest that future studies may focus on the mechanisms and consequences of neurodevelopmental central auditory processing dysfunction and its potential relationship to anxiety disorders.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
BMC , 2024. Vol. 16, no 1, article id 45
Keywords [en]
Broad autistic phenotype; Central auditory processing disorder; Developmental Coordination Disorder Questionnaire; Dimensional measures; Glasgow sensory questionnaire; Hyperacusis; Research Domain Criteria
National Category
Neurosciences
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-207181DOI: 10.1186/s11689-024-09562-9ISI: 001293485100001PubMedID: 39135156OAI: oai:DiVA.org:liu-207181DiVA, id: diva2:1894936
Note
Funding Agencies|Linkping University
2024-09-042024-09-042024-09-19