The Relationship between Retained Primitive Reflexes and Hemispheric Connectivity in Autism Spectrum Disorders

Author:

Melillo Robert1,Leisman Gerry12ORCID,Machado Calixto3ORCID,Machado-Ferrer Yanin3,Chinchilla-Acosta Mauricio3,Melillo Ty4,Carmeli Eli1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Movement and Cognition Laboratory, Department of Physical Therapy, University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel

2. Department of Neurology, University of the Medical Sciences of Havana, Havana 10400, Cuba

3. Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Institute for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Havana 10400, Cuba

4. Northeast College of the Health Sciences, Seneca Falls, New York, NY 13148, USA

Abstract

Background: Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) can be identified by a general tendency toward a reduction in the expression of low-band, widely dispersed integrative activities, which is made up for by an increase in localized, high-frequency, regionally dispersed activity. The study assessed ASD children and adults all possessing retained primitive reflexes (RPRs) compared with a control group that did not attempt to reduce or remove those RPRs and then examined the effects on qEEG and brain network connectivity. Methods: Analysis of qEEG spectral and functional connectivity was performed, to identify associations with the presence or absence of retained primitive reflexes (RPRs), before and after an intervention based on TENS unilateral stimulation. Results: The results point to abnormal lateralization in ASD, including long-range underconnectivity, a greater left-over-right qEEG functional connectivity ratio, and short-range overconnectivity in ASD. Conclusion:. Clinical improvement and the absence of RPRs may be linked to variations in qEEG frequency bands and more optimized brain networks, resulting in more developmentally appropriate long-range connectivity links, primarily in the right hemisphere.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Neuroscience

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