"We also found that the rate of amygdala overgrowth in the first year is linked to the child's social deficits at age two", said first author Mark Shen, PhD, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Neuroscience at UNC Chapel Hill and the Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities (CIDD). "The faster the amygdala grew in infancy, the more social difficulties the child showed when diagnosed with autism a year later".
"Our research suggests an optimal time to start interventions and support children who are at highest likelihood of developing autism may be during the first year of life", explained senior author Joseph Piven, MD, Professor of Psychiatry and Paediatrics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "The focus of a pre-symptomatic intervention might be to improve visual and other sensory processing in babies before social symptoms even appear".