Eating licorice during pregnancy may hurt child

October 16, 2009 by parentinprogress

I love red licorice, and I’m sure I ate some during both my pregnancies (though I don’t remember any licorice binges). But this new research suggests that excessive amounts during pregnancy could hurt the child’s IQ and behavior later.

The study found that 8-year-olds whose mothers ate large amount of licorice during pregnancy:

1) didn’t perform as well as their peers on cognitive tests

2) were more likely to have poor attention spans

3) were more likely to display disruptive behaviors, like those found in ADHD

The scientists believe that this is due to glycyrrhizin, an ingredient in licorice that might allow stress hormones to cross from the mother to the baby in utero.

There was also a link with high licorice consumption and shorter pregnancies.

Here’s the study: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/166570.php

Juggling improves brain function

October 15, 2009 by parentinprogress

Ok, don’t laugh, but I learned how to juggle at clown camp. Yep, it’s a real thing, and I attended one summer when my dad was teaching at the creative writing session. (I also did drama camp and the writing camp the next two years.)

Anyway, I always knew juggling was fun – and mildly entertaining for anyone under the age of 6 to watch, but now scientists are suggesting it’s good for your brain too. Juggling makes structural changes in the white matter of the brain and helps increase synapses in the brain.

Scientists think there may be some lessons in here regarding the treatment/prevention of multiple sclerosis, which is basically a breakdown of those brain pathways.

The scientist confirmed what I say all the time: The brain isn’t static. It can change – even in adults. We can rewrite our brains! This study show that juggling (which uses the visuo-motor part of the brain) does show that white matter (the part of the brain that contains bundles of long fibers with electrical impulses between nerve cells) is affected.

Here’s the study: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/167052.php

Dyslexia is different depending on language

October 14, 2009 by parentinprogress

This is interesting, even though I don’t know much about the Chinese language.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/167147.php

When it comes to dyslexia (literally, “trouble with reading”), children who speak Chinese have a more complicated and severe issue.

English-speaking children with dyslexia have a “phonological disorder” that causes them to have difficulty detecting or manipulating sound structures, which  leads to problems mapping speech sounds onto letters.

Chinese-speaking children with dyslexia, however, have TWO disorders: problems with visual spacing and difficulty with phonology. 

The researchers explains it as follows:

In English, letters are pronounceable. In Chinese, characters have a number of “intricate strokes packed into a square configuration, and the pronunciations must be memorized by rote…so a fine-grained visuospatial analysis is needed to activate the characters’ phonological and semantic information.”

Interesting!

Autism news! Primate study links mercury in vaccine to brain injury!

October 7, 2009 by parentinprogress

I think this is BIG news!

This new study found that monkeys that received a Hep B vaccine w/ the mercury-based preservative thimerosal had SIGNIFICANT DELAYS in developing important brain functions. Those who didn’t get the vaccines developed normally.

Autism now affects 1 in 91 kids and many believe it’s due to the mercury preservative in many shots. 

According to this article, the preservative is still found in all multi-dose shots for both the season flu and swine flu. I think that’s pretty important to know – and weigh – going into flu season.

You can read more about the study and results here:

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/166102.php

Some UK theme parks allow ADHD kids to cut in line

September 25, 2009 by parentinprogress

I’ve written a lot of posts about ADHD, but this is a first in terms of accommodations.

The Disability Discrimination Act makes it possible for kids with documented proof of ADHD to cut in line in order to meet the  ”accommodations for the needs of all visitors.”

The argument is that kids with ADHD have a lot of difficulty waiting in line and “serious problems with understanding time and an inability to delay reward.”

But what really bugs me most is that kids don’t have to suffer from ADHD. We now know that cognitive skills training (and sometimes, if necessary, Ritalin to treat symptoms) can essentially completely strengthen weak attention skills. Yet the chief executive of the National ADD Info and Support Service said: 

“These are children with a disability who cannot wait. You cannot teach someone who is crippled to walk, someone who is deaf to hear.” GOODNESS!  Are those really fair comparisons??

Here’s the full story:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8232633.stm

If you can’t breastfeed, at least use DHA formula

September 24, 2009 by parentinprogress

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/09/090915100945.htm

 

If you can’t nurse your baby, the next best thing seems to be formula with DHA. This study shows that formula with DHA actual boosts cognitive development. The research author said it’s possible that the beneficial effects of DHA extend far beyond infancy, because babies who took it displayed “superior performance on the means-end problem-solving task.” DHA is an essential fatty acid found in breast milk. It’s good to give your kids omega 3s and fatty acids later in life too – like through fresh (not fried) fish or gelatin capsules.

12 Myths of Dyslexia

September 22, 2009 by parentinprogress

Just got this in a newsletter this morning. I have permission to post it.

 

http://learningrx.lyrishq.net/newsletter-10—september-2009-1/12-myths-we-tend-to-believe-about-dyslexia/

 

1. People with dyslexia see words backward such as “dog” for “god” or “was” for “saw”.

 

This myth is incorrect. Dyslexia is not caused by a vision problem. Many people have a lifelong confusion over left and right. Plus, they have difficulty sounding out the words in the first place and may simply mix up the words. They do not see things backwards.

2. Dyslexia is a medical diagnosis.

 

Physicians do not test for dyslexia and it is not classified as a medical term. Physicians are not trained to test for reading, spelling, and writing difficulties and there is not a pill or medical procedure to help with those types of issues.

3. Dyslexia cannot be diagnosed until 3rd grade.

 

False. Professionals conducting cognitive testing can accurately diagnose reading problems as early as 5 years old.

 

Parents need to be aware of the warning signs of a risk for dyslexia before 3rd grade:

 

Ages 8 and Under

Children as young as 5 can be screened for reading problems with simple phonemic awareness tests. Consider a screening that probes for reading difficulties or schedule a complete cognitive skills evaluation if you see any of the following risk factors:

 

Pre-K or Kindergarten– Difficulty:

 

    * Recognizing rhymes

    * Remembering names of friends, peers, etc.

    * With normal language development

    * Recognizing some letter shapes

 

End of 1st Grade – Difficulty:

 

    * Learning the alphabet and corresponding letter sounds

    * Applying “phonics” to reading and spelling

    * Spelling common sight words

    * Retelling stories in sequence and making predictions

    * Reading aloud with some fluency and comprehension

 

End of 2nd Grade – Difficulty:

 

    * Recalling facts and details

    * Using phonics to sound out words including multi-syllable words

    * Correctly spelling previously studied and commonly seen words

 

Ages 9 and up

 

    * Training is available to help older students overcome life-long reading difficulties. Does your older child need help?

 

 

Warnings Signs to Watch in Your Older Child:

 

    * The mispronunciation of the names of people and places

    * Struggling to retrieve the right word to express a thought

    * A hesitation to say or read words aloud that might be mispronounced

    * A history of reading and spelling difficulties

    * A lack of fluency in reading

    * Embarrassment about or not wanting to read aloud

    * Spending inordinate amounts of time doing homework

    * A dislike of reading

    * Showing a preference for books that have fewer words per page

    * Persistent spelling difficulties or selecting easy-to-spell alternatives when writing

    * The substitution of made-up words during reading for words that are too difficult for the reader to pronounce

 

 

4. Most kids outgrow their reading and spelling problems. It’s just a temporary glitch.

 

Incorrect. Scientific, independent research shows that in reading development, once a child struggles with reading, spelling, and writing in the middle of 1st grade, there is a 90 percent chance that the same child will struggle with those same issues in 8th grade and adulthood if intervention is not taken to correct and improve them right away. That means that only 10 percent of those kids will outgrow their reading, spelling, and writing struggles with no outside intervention. Waiting is the worst possible thing to do because a child with reading difficulties will only fall further and further behind.

12 Dyslexia Myths_Girl5. Dyslexia affects four times more boys than girls.

 

Not completely correct. More boys are tested for dyslexia than girls, but the numbers are about equal. Boys are more apt to act out their frustration in 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grade when they are unable or ill-equipped to do their homework or assignments. Parents and teachers see that frustration and send them for testing to pinpoint the problems. Girls on the other hand are more quiet and become invisible. Their reading problems are not noticed as early and may remain undetected until high school or college.

6. Children with dyslexia will never read well. Just teach them to compensate.

 

People with dyslexia can become terrific readers with the right intervention. Teaching them the basic code (and subsequently the complex code) of the English language and helping them understand how to understand what is written can open up the world of reading, spelling, and writing. Testing a child early in his or her school career can pinpoint problems and prevent major reading difficulties before they even start.

7. People who struggle to read are not very intelligent.

 

Some of the most intelligent men and women struggle to read because difficulties with the written word occur at all levels of intelligence and IQ score. And, in reverse, low intelligence does not lead to reading difficulties unless a child is mentally retarded. Intelligence is only moderately positively correlated to reading ability. Some famous people who have had reading problems are Charles Schwab, Dwight E. Eisenhower, Anderson Cooper, Albert Einstein, and Agatha Christie.

8. Dyslexia only occurs in languages using the alphabet, not in countries with logographic languages like China and Japan.

 

False. Chinese and Japanese students (or others in countries with a logographic language) make the same sound-based errors or phonological mistakes that English speakers do or others with alphabetic languages such as Spanish, Italian, or French speakers. Reading problems are just as prevalent in China as in the United States. Logographic languages are based on logograms, written symbols that represent an entire spoken word without expressing its pronunciation.

9. Dyslexia is rare.

 

According to researchers at the National Institutes of Health, 1 out of every 5 people are affected by dyslexia. That’s 20 percent of the entire population. The degree of severity does differ, however. Only 10 percent of children with dyslexia actually qualify for special education to correct those reading problems leaving 9 of every 10 kids to fend for themselves. Dyslexia is the most common reason that a child will struggle with spelling, then writing, and then reading, hitting a glass ceiling by 3rd grade.

10. Dyslexia is a catch-all term.

 

This was correct in the 60’s and 70’s, but now, after new academic research, we know much more about reading and the brain. Dyslexia means “trouble with reading”, is neurological in origin, and is a specific learning disability. Characteristics include problems accurately and fluently recognizing words, spelling mistakes, and the inability to decode a word. Reading comprehension and a lack of reading experience are unintended consequences that hinder vocabulary and background knowledge.

11. Every child who struggles with reading has dyslexia.

 

Though dyslexia is not the only reason a child may struggle with reading, it is the most common reason. Dyslexia encompasses more than just reading problems. It impacts spelling, speech, writing, and memorizing sequences and random facts. Some of the characteristics of each of these problems are:

 

    * Mixing up sounds in multisyllable words like helicopter, cinnamon, hospital, and spaghetti.

    * Problems memorizing the days of the week, months of the year, and sequence of the alphabet.

    * Difficulty remembering spelling words from one week to the next.

    * The more warning signs you see, the more confidence you can have that dyslexia is a cause of their academic problems. But, cognitive skills testing is the only way to pinpoint the real underlying difficulties.

 

 

12.  Children with dyslexia are unable to read.

 

Untrue. Most children and adults are able to read, even if it is at a basic level. But children with dyslexia are likely to reach a certain point in reading ability with the inability to move beyond a 3rd-grade reading level. Despite being taught phonics, they have extreme difficulty sounding out an unknown word. They may read a word perfectly on page one and forget it by page two. Their list of 30 spelling words may be memorized for a spelling test and forgotten the next week. Spelling is one of the classic red flags alerting parents and teachers of a serious underlying problem. The children are unable to understand the basic code of the English language and cannot break down or reconstruct (with spelling) words using codes (letters).

 

 

To find out more about LearningRx’s programs for preschoolers, elementary students, middle and high school kids, college students, and adults, go to www.learningrx.com.


Alzheimer’s Disease & Dementia to grow rapidly

September 21, 2009 by parentinprogress

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/164641.php

 

There are some scary stats about the future of Alzheimer’s and dementia. 

35.6 million w/ Alzheimer’s in 2010

and the number is expected to DOUBLE every couple decades!

(To clarify, dementia is a set of symptoms caused by a progressive decrease in cognitive function. Alzheimer’s is a progressive disease that is incurable and causes death.)

So how big a deal is this? Alzheimer’s Disease International is recommending that the World Health Organization declare dementia a priority because of the growing elderly population.

Pill proven to improve memory & cognitive performance in Alzheimer’s and those w/out dementia

September 18, 2009 by parentinprogress

First, a disclaimer: I don’t work for the company that sells this pill or even know it works. But I found this study (and the clinical study is published in the forthcoming issue of The Journal of Nutrition, Health and Aging) and thought it was fascinating!

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/164411.php

A team of scientists tested the effects of MemoryXL(tm), which is NOT a RX but rather old over the counter. They found that adults without dementia improved their memory within 2 weeks and improved over the course of a year. It was already shown the MemoryXL ™ improved the cognitive performance in people with Alzheimer’s. 

It’s sold in pharmacies, stores and other retail outlets (maybe Whole Foods?) for $59 (for 60 pills), which is a one-month supply. 

It was also shown to reduce agitation/irritation for longer than 2.5 years for those with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s.

I’m not suggesting that you use this as an alternative to other treatments, such as cognitive skills therapy, but it is something worth looking into as an additional method of treatment.

New gel heals brain cells and dead bone!

September 17, 2009 by parentinprogress

This is so cool! At Clemson University they developed a new gel that actually produces new blood vessels, allowing the body to replace its own stem cells. For those with TBI (traumatic brain injury) or broken bones, this is very hopeful!

The rats in the test actually recovered ALMOST ALL of their original muscle and sensory functions just 12 weeks after major brain injuries. Their memory and learning also improved dramatically compared to the brain injured rats who did NOT receive the gel treatment.

The same gel (modified to encourage bone growth instead of brain cell growth) worked with on a broken bone.

It’s going to be another 5 years before they test it on humans, but there is so much potential in this for people with TBI (and broken bones).

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32840280/ns/technology_and_science-innovation/