So we’ve taken our history and
performed the physical exam, but having this data alone does not yield the
diagnosis. It is important with all of this data to step back and look at the
entire clinical picture in order to understand what is truly going with the
patient with ASD that seeks care from you. Commonly, patients in this
population that have a hard time communicating tend to present with an overall
picture of agitation, yet each individual patient may have different etiologies
that are causing this clinical picture. This phenomena is described in the
literature as the “tip of the iceberg crisis behavior” presentation in which
the patient presents with an observable acute agitation that is driven by an
underlying cause that is not apparently obvious.1 Many different
etiologies can cause such challenging behaviors which fall under the categories
of medical causes, psychiatric, sensory and self-regulatory causes,
communication difficulties, trouble related to social skills deficits, academic
causes, and environmental changes.
GI & Endocrine
|
Respiratory
|
Infection
|
Neurologic
|
Misc.
|
GERD
Obesity
Constipation
Poor nutrition
Hypothyroidism
|
Sleep apnea
Asthma
|
UTIs
Ear infections
Dental
infections
|
Enuresis
Encopresis
Headaches
Sleep problems
|
Undetected
injuries
Pain from poor
hygiene/care
Juvenile RA
Hyperlipidemia
|
Medical causes are the first
category mentioned that should be investigated and ruled out before preceding
any further as these are typically rectifiable causes that can often go
unmissed and can be causing the patient a great discomfort. There are many possible
medical etiologies that can present as acute agitation in patients with ASD,
many of which are listed in the table to the right. Seeing how broadly these
different etiologies spread in terms of severity of the condition and the body
system affected, it is important that the initial evaluation of these
individuals should include a thorough physical exam and the checking of
preliminary vital signs and a blood sugar reading.1 Depending on how
these results present together with the overall history of the patient’s
present illness, the provider should consider ordering screening lab tests for
electrolyte abnormalities, infection, and possibly imaging studies before
moving on to investigating non-medical causes.
Acute
agitation can also result in patients with ASD as a result of a number of
different non-medical causes. It can occur as a result of psychiatric
comorbidities including anxiety, depression and affective disorders; trouble
communicating, academic difficulties including an underlying learning
disability; self-care skill deficits including toileting issues (which may
indicate trauma, abuse, medical or psychiatric issues all in itself), or social
skills deficits related to bullying at school.1 For this reason, it
is very important to get information from caregivers and people the individual
works with outside of home in order to determine if there have been any changes
in the patient’s family or social circumstances. Even changes in the physical
environments related to these individuals that work with the patient can be
underlying causes of the patient’s behavior, as chaotic overstimulation in the
community environment can cause these individuals to retreat in a potentially
inappropriate or dangerous way.1 This is why, for these patients, it
is very important to take a detailed social history taking into account any
changes that could be throwing these patients off-kilter resulting in this
agitated presentation.
Thus, it is apparent that this installment in
the “Improving Healthcare
Encounters of Patients with Autism Spectrum Disorder” series is essentially a call to honing our
skills from the previous two chapters: the history and the physical exam. This
is mainly due to the atypical communicative, social, and sensory attributes of
these individuals; allowing any etiology to be potentially involved in a
patient’s given presentation. This concept is beautifully described Thompson
and Lubinski’s (1968) differentiation between the topography and the function
behavior. The topography of a behavior is essentially what the behavior appears
to be on the surface, in the same way a topographical map of a given terrain
tells you what the surface of that area looks like. The function of the
behavior meanwhile, is the purpose the behavior serves to fulfill in its
performance. This classic article further describes topography of behavior as
three different behavior types including the elicited (which is determined by
what came before), the emitted (operant/result of consequence), or the evoked (induced
by temporal arrangement of the stimuli); as it further describes the function
of behavior also as three different types including the antecedent, current
stimulus circumstances, and response consequence.2 These three
behaviors and these three functions of behavior can be paired with one another
in any combination which means that topography
does not predict function, nor vice-versa. Now what does any of this have
to do with what we have just learned? Consider the following illustration and
you’ll soon find out:
Pictured
here are the similarly-designed bedrooms of two different boys. Look
at how organized they are – they both must have cleaned their room! Seeing as
this behavior of cleaning the room looks
the same, the topography of the
behavior is then the same. However, the boy with room A cleaned his room
because messiness and clutter tends to stress him out – how hard it is to find
the things he needs! Meanwhile, the boy in room B cleaned his room after his
mom promised she would get him the newest video game console as a reward. With
these two new pieces of information, we now realize that although the topography of the behavior (cleaning the
room) of these boys is the same, the function
or purpose that this behavior serves is in fact very different!
We can apply this very same
concept to what we have been talking about. Although the presentation of acute
agitation and defensiveness can appear
to be the same or nonspecific on the surface, meaning the topography of the
behavior can be similar among these individuals; the true hidden cause behind this presentation, or the function of the behavior can be a many
number of different etiologies as described previously. This is why, in taking
your history and physical exam, it is important to take a very wide and broad
approach to these patients – ruling out the medical and more readily
identifiable and correctable first and then subsequently delving into
nonmedical causes. This way, you can be sure to narrow in on the patient’s true
cause of distress and can accurately address it resulting in better outcomes of
care.
Alexis Matarangas DUCOM 2019
REFERENCES:
- McGonigle JJ, Venkat A, Beresford C, Campbell TP, & Gabriels RL. Management of agitation in individuals with autism spectrum disorders in the emergency department. Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am 23, 83-95 (2014).
- Thompson T & Lubinski D. Units of analysis and kinetic structure of behavioral repertoires. J Exp Anal Beh 46, 219-242 (1986).
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