A Whiff of Oxytocin for Autism

Susan Kuchinskas
Lewis Mehl-Madrona is an M.D. who doesn't see autism as an incurable disease. He says, "I don’t think autism is one thing. I think many things are masquerading under the same label. It's not a one-cure illness, because it's not a one-cause illness."

One thing that sometimes works is oxytocin -- and in some kids, he says, it works really well.

Therefore, when he treats kids with autism spectrum disorder, he keeps testing various treatments until he finds some that improve the symptoms. He's a pragmatist, he says. "We just try lots of things until the kids get better."

Eric Hollander, a researcher at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, has done two studies of the benefits of oxytocin in autistic adults. In one, 15 adults showed a significant reduction in repetitive behaviors; in the second, oxytocin improved the ability of 15 adults to decipher the emotional content of speech.

Mehl-Madrona, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Saskatchewan, uses the same oxytocin inhalers prescribed for lactating women. The kids inhale 37.5 units once a day.

"Kids who do respond to the oxytocin inhaler probably have some disorder of oxytocin production-- or maybe they make funny oxytocin," he says.

Functional MRI studies have found that the right amygdala in the brains of autistic kids are overactive. The amygdala is a hub in the brain responsible for processing information from the senses and assigning emotional meaning to it. In the normal brain, the right amygdala lights up when a person sees an angry or threatening face. But in the brains of autistic kids, the right amygdala lights up when they see any face, no matter what the expression.


Inhaling oxytocin eases this response, keeping the right amygdala from activating so easily.

Mehl-Madrona has used the oxytocin inhaler treatment for a couple of years, in preparation for a true, randomized controlled trial.

So far, he says, "I'm encouraged. Mostly what I'm seeing -- and it will take some more time to feel sure about this --is a decrease in repetitive, compulsive behaviors, including self-injurious ones, and better social interaction. I have one kid who is actually making empathetic statements. His mother was blown away."

For more information, see "Phase 2 Trial of Oxytocin for Autism Within 12 Months," and Oxytocin Therapy for Autism Gets Closer."
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Susan Kuchinskas

My new book, The Chemistry of Connection, explains how our ability to produce and respond to oxytocin influences every aspect of our lives. Meanwhile, I track news and research about oxytocin on my blog, Hug the Monkey.

A magazine assignment about neuroscience introduced me to the fascinating world of the human brain. I learned that science has begun to unravel the mystery of human feeling.

I homed in on one amazing molecule: oxytocin, the hormone that allows us to bond with others. When we're touched with affection, when we make love, even when we hang out with friends, our brains release oxytocin.

This reaction isn't automatic; it's learned after birth, from our mothers. But many things can keep us from developing the oxytocin response, or from developing it in a healthy way.

I'm a journalist and author who's focused on internet technology for most of her career. As a reporter for Adweek, I had a ringside seat for the dotcom circus -- and the later bust. My staff jobs at Business 2.0, M-Business (a defunct mobile internet magazine) and internetnews.com kept me in the middle of the tech industry. I moved into the brave new world of blogging as founding editor of The 360, writing about online advertising, digital media and web 2.0.

I continue to write about science and technology, as I explore the power of human emotions.

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