How Did You Know Your Child Was Autistic
How early did yous know your child had autism?
(130 Posts)
TheLoneWolfDies Sat 25-May-19 00:53:28
Ds is 6 months, I have always been concerned, since I got pregnant, that he may have ASD every bit my blood brother has it and then does my uncle.
He makes center contact, babbles, responds to his name most of the time, cries for me and DP if an unknown person holds him, is grin since three weeks and laughing since hust before iii months. He tin can roll and sit independantly.
However, when in his highchair or on my lap he bangs his head back quite a lot, he hand flaps and pulls his pilus and I'm simply mildly concerned incase these are early signs.
And then when did you know and what were the first things you noticed?
HalfBloodPrincess Sat 25-May-nineteen 01:03:50
Ds was fifteen months.
Lack of gestures, no response to his name, lost all his words, didn't appoint with us when playing - simply went and sat by himself. Couldn't get or keep his attention. Didn't like people, whether strangers or family unit. His sogs test was higher up average for all aspects except social and comprehension skills.
Nonetheless going through the process of diagnosis but it's a given he is on the spectrum - only lots of boxes to tick and things to rule out start. He's my tertiary child and I just knew something was different.
The things you're describing though - all 3 of mine did those at effectually the aforementioned age and it's only the youngest there are concerns almost. Information technology doesn't necessarily hateful your dc has asd simply maybe if it's something you lot're looking for signs of anyway you'll attribute everything he does to a 'reddish flag'. Maybe speak to your HV
dontquit Sat 25-May-19 01:21:26
Lying hither beside my tertiary dc. She'due south 6mths also. She's but learning to curl but not quite mastered it yet. Non able to sit unaided. Doing everything else yous depict. Loves throwing the head dorsum when I'yard sitting behind her and laughing up at me. Pulls her pilus (and mine!) all the fourth dimension. Bit clumsy with her hands and has just learned to clap which she keeps practicing..doesn't ever piece of work out and can be a bit flappy. She'south delighted with the praise she gets.
I'm not a chip worried near her. Doesn't seem any dissimilar from my other ii although I can't fully remember when they did what.
My friend has a son with autism. She's a nurse and assesses children development as office of her chore. I think she didn't detect any signs in her son until at to the lowest degree two if not afterwards and he was most 4 when they got a diagnosis.
Punxsutawney Sat 25-May-19 07:xv:27
Well I call back I realised when he was about viii. Although there had been signs earlier. He is now nearly 15 years quondam and currently existence assessed. Looking dorsum now it'south obvious but he did cope just about until secondary school. The teenage years are an awful time to become through assessment and diagnosis though.
SinkGirl Sat 25-May-nineteen 07:25:43
My twins both have ASD. For one I knew something was wrong from about 18 months when he had a huge skills regression. The other, I didn't realise until he was nigh 2 - he gradually stopped interacting, making eye contact etc.
In that location probably were signs before on - they never mimicked annihilation for instance.
Cookit Sat 25-May-19 07:26:02
The thing is, if you lot'd met my DS prior to 12 months you'd call up he had it.
Smiled late - maybe 10 weeks. Never always smiled at anyone that was non me or his Dad. If someone else made middle contact he'd kickoff screaming hysterically , even people that saw him regularly. Rolled over at 6 months, so a little late.
Then was a really early on talker, had loads of words before 12/13 months and of a sudden inverse, information technology was like once he could express himself he was ok. Is three and very bright at present. Doesn't dearest other children but likes the visitor of adults. No signs at all.
I practise believe you lot can know early just things modify from that first year too.
WeMarchOn Saturday 25-May-xix 07:27:29
Virtually 2, she didn't talk until she was 3.5
ContessaIsOnADietDammit Sabbatum 25-May-19 07:29:21
DS2 is 7yo and currently existence assessed. I think commencement thinking there was something slightly different about him at ii months, simply put information technology down to hormones/sleep impecuniousness. I never had the aforementioned thought almost DS1 and so I do wonder what exactly I was picking upwardly on....
Sirzy Sat 25-May-19 07:29:46
About iii
In the kindest possible fashion though you need to try and relax. Enjoy your infant as he is at present don't let worries about what may or may non exist stop you enjoying him being a infant.
vickibee Sat 25-May-xix 07:32:09
Effectually. 2, all his early milestones were missed. I mentioned my concerns to or health visitor and was told he was spirited! He had spoken communication filibuster and didn't speak until he was four. .
crazymare20 Sat 25-May-xix 07:36:45
Just earlier 3rd birthday. I also have a xi calendar month sometime who I'm watching similar a hawk for signs, he does similar to yours (manus flapping, banging head) but I'm non concerned virtually those equally they are normal for babies and should outgrow it. Is your babe responding to their name? I wouldn't worry nigh information technology, just relish your baby. If they have got asd there's cypher you lot can do to change it and worrying is only going to ruin your enjoyment of your baby.
chocolatebuttonsandcheese Sat 25-May-xix 07:37:32
My DS is thirteen months and I feel a little he'due south a little unlike.
Socially he can't cope with strangers, he learnt to wave, peepo, dance and has now regressed and won't do this.
Nursery have mentioned on occasions how much he can't cope with other children as well close to him. Flappy arms etc.
I've not mentioned it to anybody yet so we will run into
freshstartnewme Sat 25-May-19 07:38:45
when in his highchair or on my lap he bangs his head back quite a lot, he hand flaps and pulls his hair and I'm just mildly concerned incase these are early signs.
This really simply sounds like a 6 calendar month old. Please enjoy your infant and stop looking for things that may not even be there. You will tie yourself in knots and miss the precious moments.
binglybongly Sat 25-May-19 07:41:27
noticed a difference from 1 yr. from actual assessments age 2 +. official ASD historic period iv or 5. it was plant nursery that noticed the difference/ red flags from 1 yr.
crazymare20 Sabbatum 25-May-nineteen 07:42:52
Just to add the only things I tin pinpoint well-nigh my daughter as a baby which were deifferent from my other two were, she smiled simply you had to work for information technology, she would lay on her play mat watching the lights for ages and wouldn't get bored, never developed her stranger danger and would go to anyone, but that'southward information technology, she hit all her other milestones including speech simply it was picked upward at 2 and half as she didn't have as many words as she should have had. The repetitive behaviour kicked in virtually 3.
TheVanguardSix Sat 25-May-19 07:43:08
Well-nigh fifteen months.
He reached his milestones perfectly fine, but he was soooo repose, so quiet you would forget he was in the room. If I was really decorated with our other kids and people milling well-nigh, I had to remind myself not to forget nearly DC3. At the same time, he would run and run and run and run when we were out with the canis familiaris. I've always had 'runners' for toddlers but he would only be off and he wouldn't come back or respond to his name. And that's when it really began to hit domicile- when he was 18 months and I really noticed he never responded to his name. I would exist out with the dog, calling for DC3 (who would exist engrossed in the wild flowers or a blade of grass), saying his proper name, clapping, trying and so hard to become his attention and the dog would respond to DC3'due south name rather than DC himself, and come bounding over.
Guest8989 Sat 25-May-19 07:47:57
Over a twelvemonth at least. I do agree with a previous poster. Enjoy your babe! You tin't make a judgement at such a young age. Sounds similar he is developing every bit expected!
unlimiteddilutingjuice Sabbatum 25-May-xix 07:54:08
In the procedure of getting DS assessed on his teachers advice.
To be honest, I'yard still non actually seeing it.
I only see a bright, quirky little guy who enjoys his own visitor.
The signs that school accept noticed are: eating newspaper, chewing things, wriggling, unable to sequence tasks (specially practical tasks like getting dressed for PE) and not actually noticing what the other kids are up to.
The incident that caused her most business concern was when he went to wait for the school bus at luncheon time instead of following the other kids into the cafeteria.
TheLoneWolfDies Sat 25-May-19 07:58:16
Thank you and so much for the replies, I meant to respond a while ago merely DS had needles yesterday and has been upward since 5.30am 😂
I know I definatly need to relax, I don't worry all the time and to be honest its not even really worry I just want to know early on if he did accept it to try to help him as much equally I tin.
Hes my get-go so i wasnt sure if the head banging etc, was normal, I mentioned it to MIL yesterday whos had 4 kids and she looked at me funny and said hers didnt practise that. I suppose all babies are different and she may accept forgotten by now too.
TheLoneWolfDies Sat 25-May-19 08:02:47
Oh and yeah he responds to his name near of the time, if hes as well interested in a toy he might ignore us but for the virtually role he will turn his caput. Honestly I don't fifty-fifty know why I'm concerned everything seems to be going fine but I recall perchance MILs response yesterday threw me off.
And even if he did take it, that would be just the way he is and I would love him merely the aforementioned for it. I volition definatly try not to retrieve about it, your all correct, he wont be a babe forever and I'll regret it when hes older.
stucknoue Sat 25-May-19 08:16:58
Officially she was only shy of three, but looking dorsum she was different from birth merely being my beginning kid I didn't realise
SinkGirl Saturday 25-May-xix 08:24:24
The thing is there's really no way to tell. My 2 didn't miss any milestones but then they regressed. Some kids do miss milestones only and so are fine.
It can't hurt to look at some early intervention information and apply some of the strategies in terms of encouraging social interactions and communication. If I'd known sooner this is what I would accept washed. Just you do likewise demand to enjoy them because it goes then fast!
ipswichwitch Sat 25-May-xix 08:30:00
Mine was a very piece of cake baby - ridiculously and then, which I idea was a godsend since his brother was very demanding! When he hit 18mo the terrible twos started and he became a complete scattering. Wouldn't respond to his name, constantly running off, getting into all sorts of bother. He hasn't grown out of information technology and he's 5 now.
His speech communication was excellent at two, center contact limited and very much on his terms. His meltdowns started then and he nevertheless has them regularly so I'd say at nearly two we started realising there was something going on but nosotros were dismissed by HCP equally his speech was so good
Nursery flagged up the aforementioned concerns we had at 3yo, and they (along with a new HV) got united states of america referred on and nosotros are still in the assessment procedure.
streeeemline Sat 25-May-19 08:32:21
I 'knew' from 18 months. He was diagnosed 2 months before his tertiary altogether.
Didn't bespeak. Didn't babble or mimic. Repetitive behaviours eg spinning wheels on toys for hours on stop. Didn't crawl until over 12m and didn't walk until 18m. Fabricated centre contact, yet. Didn't engage in any kind of imaginary play - he was and is always in his ain petty bubble. He missed well-nigh all of the milestones on the ASQs. Had no sense of fright and is a bolter. Cannot feed himself. Now he tin can speak, he uses repetitive phrases (echolalia) rather than functional speech communication.
It tin can be a really worrying and confusing time. ASD behaviours can, at an early on historic period, exist easily attributed to other things; for example, DS cannot await for ANYTHING. Results in an instant meltdown. This could be an ASD symptom or just being a 3 year old. That's why diagnosis can be a challenging path.
IntoTheDeep Sat 25-May-19 09:38:48
Nosotros had a few niggles about DS1 from when he was a toddler, simply his first nursery said all his behaviour was within normal ranges for his age, and then we just put information technology downwards to being a irksome developer.
It wasn't until DS2 (2 years younger than DS1) was nearly ii that we really started to think something wasn't quite normal. When DS2 was most two, we noticed a big bound in his social skills, and all of a sudden he'd overtaken DS1 in most areas of social / emotional / behavioural development listed in those EYFS progress charts nurseries use. And we idea information technology seemed odd for a nearly ii yr one-time'south evolution to be more advanced than his 4 yr old brothers. DS1 started a new pre-school nursery almost then, and his teacher there raised concerns about his development very shortly later on he started.
But looking back there were earlier signs that nosotros hadn't picked upwards on every bit existence unusual behaviour for a babe, e.yard. like the way DS1 hated having anyone trying to agree or cuddle him when he was sleepy as a baby.
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