Autism Speaks and Town & Country They Don't Let On That Older Dads Are The Main Cause of the Rapidly Rising Rate of De Novo Autism
This is really interesting who in the world ( who knows that autism is caused by genetic mutations that either come from damaged sperm of older fathers or damaged gene/s passed on from an older maternal grandfather through the mother to the child, or from earlier generations)is supposed to believe that these people have anything in mind except making sure that no one learns what is causing the autism epidemic so that certain sectors can make a killing from fundraising and government and private grants for research projects on autism. What a sad joke, take schizophrenia and classical autism and milder disorders caused by old dad in one generation or another and make it into the glamorous charity of the day and make it into a mystery Not to mention the market for pharmaceuticals that keep growing to the joy of investors.
Never mention the Reichenberg study whihc was not the first by any means to find older paternal age and autism connected. Christopher Gillberg's study titled "Maternal Age and Autism" published in 1980 found that the fathers of the autistic children were much older than average (average mean age of 34) compared to the general population and that study was not the first to noticed older fathers and older parents.
Has autism been made up by psychiatrists, pharmaceutical companies academics and PR Agencies? Is that the way you repackage schizophrenia and classical autism to make a multi billion dollar industry? I guess it is.
Main Outcome Measures Information on persons coded as having International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision ASD was obtained from the registry. The registry identified 110 cases of ASD (incidence, 8.3 cases per 10 000 persons), mainly autism, in the smaller subset with complete parental age data.
Results There was a significant monotonic association between advancing paternal age and risk of ASD. Offspring of men 40 years or older were 5.75 times (95% confidence interval, 2.65-12.46; P<.001) more likely to have ASD compared with offspring of men younger than 30 years, after controlling for year of birth, socioeconomic status, and maternal age. Advancing maternal age showed no association with ASD after adjusting for paternal age. Sensitivity analyses indicated that these findings were not the result of bias due to missing data on maternal age. Conclusions Advanced paternal age was associated with increased risk of ASD. Possible biological mechanisms include de novo mutations associated with advancing age or alterations in genetic imprinting. Author Affiliations: Department of Psychiatry (Drs Reichenberg, Silverman, and Davidson) and Seaver Center for Autism Research (Dr Silverman), Mount Sinai School of Medicine; Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University (Drs Gross, Bresnahan, Harlap, Malaspina, and Susser); New York State Psychiatric Institute (Drs Gross, Bresnahan, Malaspina, and Susser), New York; Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London, England (Dr Reichenberg); and Department of Psychiatry, Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer (Drs Weiser and Davidson); School of Social Work, Bar Ilan University, Ramat-Gan (Dr Rabinowitz); School of Social Work, Hebrew University, Jerusalem (Dr Shulman); and Medical Corps, Israel Defense Forces, Tel Aviv (Drs Lubin and Knobler), Israel.
Here is Town & Country
Scientists are not sure why the copy variations emerge, but it probably has something to do with the shuffling of genetic material that occurs in the production of eggs and sperm; the process is prone to errors.
But you don't have to carry a genetic disease to pass one on — the trouble can start in your testicles. There, sperm-generating cells divide about 23 times a year, in the process slowly accumulating copying errors.
So for a man, the older you get, the less your child's genetic endowment will resemble your own.
Absolute Mutation Rate
JAMES F. CROW
"The total mutation frequency,as inferred from evolutionary studies,44), is something in the order of 100 new mutations per generation. This seems utterly frightening. Surely the overwhelming majority of these must be essentiallt neutral. More relevant is the frequency of new deleterious mutations, which is more than one per zygote.45)That is still high. WHY AREN'T WE EXTINCT
Our results indicate a linear increase in structural aberrations and disomy for chromosome 9 in sperm with respect to age.
Table II. Long-term effects of paternal ageing on offspring from table on page 2373 of Long –term effects of delayed parenthood by J.J. Tarin, J. Brines, and A. Cano
Dominant disorders
Wilms tumour, thanatophoric dysplasia, retinitis pigmentosa, osteogenisis imperfecta type IIA, acrodysostosis, achondroplasia, Apert’s disease, fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva, aniridia, bilateral retinoblastoma, multiple exostoses, Marfan’s, Lesch-Nyan’s, Pfeiffer’s, Wardenburg’s, Treacher-Collins, Soto’s, and Crouzon’s syndromes, basel cell nevus, cleidocranial dysostosis, polyposis coli, oculodentodigital syndrome, Costello syndrome , progeria, Recklinghausen’s neurofibromatosis, tuberous sclerosis and renal polycystic kidney disease.
X-linked recessive diseases
Haemophilia A and Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy
Non-cytogenetic congential defects
Congential cataracts, reduction defects of the upper limb, nasal aplasia, pulmonic and urethtal stenosis, perauricular cyst, cleft palate,1 neural tube defects
Athetoid /dystonic cerebral palsy and congenital hemiplegia
Psychotic disorders
Decreased learning capacity and/or mental retardation
FRANCIS COLLINS
"Almost all cases of HGPS (Progeria) studied so far turn out to be new mutations of paternal origin. Consistent with this, the age of fathers of children with HGPS is on the average slightly older than the general population of fathers. You can read more about this in the entry on progeria in GeneClinics.org"
paternal age effect is present as the father's age is significantly increased by about five years on average. There is no increase in consanguinity.
"De novo point mutations in such genes could explain the advanced paternal age association that has been reported for autism13. There is no evidence, however, that the risk of a de novo CNV is related to the age of either parent."
"The optimal time for a man to father a healthy child is the same as for a woman — 25 or so," says Dolores Malaspina, a psychiatry professor at New York University and coauthor of the study.
Advanced Grandparental Age as a Risk Factor for Autism
The paternal age distribution of the AGRE fathers, whose first child is autistic differs significantly from that of the 'control' sample (P=0.005). A 2 goodness-of-fit test with 2 degrees of freedom was conducted using percents in the 'control' group age categories to calculate the expected values in the AGRE sample. The shift toward higher paternal ages in those with an affected first-born is seen most dramatically in the group of AGRE fathers who are 30–39 years inclusive, which is 54.7% of the distribution compared with the 41.9 % that is expected. We interpret this shifted age distribution to provide support for the recently reported finding by Reichenberg and co-workers that autism risk is associated with advancing paternal age.
The results of this review show that 3 of the 4 population-based studies28-29,32 to examine paternal age reported a significant association with risk of autism and ASDs. The fourth study31 also found that paternal age was older in fathers of case patients with autism compared with fathers of controls, although this relationship was statistically weaker in the adjusted analysis. Thus, advancing paternal age is consistently associated with increased risk of autism and ASDs.
Advanced paternal age has been associated with several congenital disorders, including Apert syndrome,40 craniosynostosis,41 situs inversus,42 syndactyly,43 cleft lip and/or palate,44-45 hydrocephalus,44 neural tube defects,46 and Down syndrome.47 In addition, advanced paternal age has been associated with schizophrenia15 and decreased intellectual capacities in the offspring.48 The most widely proposed mechanism underlying these congenital anomalies is known as the "copy error" hypothesis, first proposed by Penrose.49 After puberty, spermatocytes divide every 16 days, and by the age of 35 years, approximately 540 cell divisions have occurred. As a result, de novo genetic mutations that result from replication errors and defective DNA repair mechanisms are believed to propagate in successive clones of spermatocytes. These mutations accumulate with advancing paternal age and thus help explain how this disorder, which has a large genetic component, can be maintained in the population despite reduced reproduction in affected individuals.
The most irrefutable finding is our demonstration that a father’s age is a major risk factor for schizophrenia. We were the first group to show that schizophrenia is linearly related to paternal age and that the risk is tripled for the offspring of the oldest groups of fathers.7 This finding has been born out in every single cohort study that has looked at paternal age and the risk for schizophrenia. The only other finding that has been as consistently replicated in schizophrenia research is that there is an increased risk associated with a family history of schizophrenia. Since only 10% to 15% of schizophrenia cases have a family history, family history does not explain much of the population risk for schizophrenia. However, we think that approximately one third or one quarter of all schizophrenia cases may be attributable to paternal age. Paternal age is the major source of de novo genetic diseases in the human population, which was first described by Penrose in the 1950s. He hypothosized that this was due to errors that arose in the male germ line over the many cycles of sperm cell replications. These mutations accumulate as paternal age advances. After the Penrose report, medical researchers identified scores of sporadic diseases in the offspring of older fathers, suggesting that these could occur from gene mutations. Particular attention was paid to conditions in last-born children. In the 1960s, an excess of schizophrenia in last-born children was also reported.
Scientists are not sure why the copy variations emerge, but it probably has something to do with the shuffling of genetic material that occurs in the production of eggs and sperm; the process is prone to errors
Labels: Autism Speaks, Fundraising, Town and Country
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