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Poor motor skills might predict if autistic child is at language disability risk

In an American sample of language-delayed children with autism, researchers found that nearly half had extremely delayed fine motor skills.

Updated on: Sep 12, 2019 02:13 PM IST
Asian News International | By , Washington D.C.
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The fine motor skills autistic children exhibit while eating, writing or even buttoning their shirt, might seem trivial but can act as a strong predictor to identify if they are at risk of developing lasting language disabilities, suggest a new study.

In the second study of Canadian children with autism, researchers found that those with extremely delayed fine motor skills made fewer gains in expressive language. (Shutterstock)
In the second study of Canadian children with autism, researchers found that those with extremely delayed fine motor skills made fewer gains in expressive language. (Shutterstock)

The association between fine motor skills and autistic child’s language development was found in a study published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.

In an American sample of language-delayed children with autism, researchers found that nearly half had extremely delayed fine motor skills.

Of this group, 77.5 per cent who had extremely delayed motor skills continued to have language disabilities in later childhood or young adulthood. By contrast, 69.6 per cent of children who demonstrated less impaired fine motor skills overcame their language delays by late childhood or young adulthood.

In the second study of Canadian children with autism, researchers found that those with extremely delayed fine motor skills made fewer gains in expressive language.

The researchers analyzed data from existing studies that used different standardized developmental tests to assess fine motor skills through tasks that require children to manipulate small objects, such as picking up Cheerios or stacking small blocks.

The first analyses focused on 86 children with autism recruited to an American study from before their second birthday to age 19. The replication study was conducted using data from a Canadian study that followed 181 children with autism from two to four years of age, until age 10.

(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text.)

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