News
about autism is almost always controversial, but the latest report that
has people abuzz—about researchers who have successfully treated some
symptoms of the disorder using a nasal spray of oxytocin—shouldn't come
as much of a shock. Scientists have been experimenting with oxytocin as
an autism treatment for years. In the new study,
conducted by French researchers, 13 subjects with "high-functioning
autism" (a.k.a. Asperger syndrome) became more trusting and socially
engaged under the hormone's influence. It's a small study, but it has
big implications, and it tracks with findings from other researchers.
Mary Carmichael spoke with one of those scientists, Eric Hollander, who
is the director of the compulsive, impulsive, and autism spectrum
disorders program at the Montefiore Medical Center in New York. Excerpts
below, with our easier-to-understand translation:
What is the oxytocin spray actually doing in the brains of these patients?
Hollander: In patients with autism, the fusiform gyrus
doesn't seem to light up in response to human faces. They light up an
adjacent region called the inferior temporal gyrus, which normally gets
lit up when people are looking at man-made objects. But we seem to get
more recruitment of the fusiform gyrus when we administer oxytocin.
This means: Unlike a healthy brain, an autistic one may
not recognize human faces as something special—it puts them in the same
category as regular objects. By boosting levels of oxytocin, researchers
may be able to fix that problem, causing the autistic brain to respond
to faces in a more normal way.
Hollander: We've seen effects in another region, called
Brodmann Area 25, which is very active in individuals who have
treatment-resistant depression. High-functioning adults with autism also
have a very active Area 25, and in response to the oxytocin, there's a
big reduction in activity.
This means: Oxytocin tamps down activity in a part of the
brain that's linked to depression and stress. "Area 25" activates the
"fight-or-flight response." If it malfunctions and starts firing all the
time, it causes people to feel chronically stressed out. By calming
down the activity in Area 25, oxytocin also calms down patients.
Do people with autism have abnormally low levels of oxytocin?
Hollander: It's challenging to measure the blood-plasma
levels of oxytocin—it can be released in blips throughout the day, so it
varies—but studies in children have found abnormalities in the plasma
levels, and the subgroup of children with autism who are the most
socially aloof tend to have the lowest levels of oxytocin. There are
also studies in monkeys that have measured oxytocin levels in the spinal
fluid as well as in the plasma. These studies show if you inhibit
nurturing behaviors early in life, the spinal fluid and plasma levels of
oxytocin are low, and they stay low throughout life.
This means: The data isn't perfect, but children with
autism, especially severe cases, seem to have low oxytocin levels.
Primate research, which is in some ways more rigorous, has shown that
monkeys deprived of maternal love as infants tend to have chronically
low levels of oxytocin throughout their lives.
Monkeys deprived of love have low oxytocin levels, and so
do kids with autism? Doesn't that sound an awful lot like the
discredited “refrigerator mother” hypothesis?
Hollander: In extreme cases of maternal deprivation, like
children raised in orphanages without any early maternal behavior,
there can be a long-lasting effect on oxytocin that's associated with
social deficits. However, that probably is not the case with good or bad
mothering. These are extreme cases of total lack of nurturing.
This means: This research does not mean that autism can
be blamed on bad parents. The only time there might be links between
parenting, oxytocin, and autismlike behavioral problems is in cases when
a child has had no meaningful interaction with caregivers whatsoever.
Some behavioral therapies seem to help people with autism,
especially if they're delivered early in life. Is it possible that
these therapies work by increasing oxytocin levels?
Hollander: Those therapies are really important—that's
the whole point of diagnosing autism early, because the therapies can
really improve the long-term developmental trajectory—but nobody has
specifically measured oxytocin in response to them. I can tell you that
there are things we know of that can enhance oxytocin levels. Deep
pressure massage does it, and breast-feeding, and sexual intercourse. We
also know that patients with autism tend to calm down by doing certain
physical activities, like lying underneath a mattress or using Temple Grandin's squeeze machine."
This means: Nobody knows how behavioral therapies for
autism affect oxytocin levels. We do know that in healthy people,
affectionate physical contact increases oxytocin, which is a "calming"
hormone. We also know that many people with autism find that being
"squeezed" (albeit not by people) is calming.
The study looked at oxytocin's effect on social
behaviors. You've also found it can affect other symptoms of autism, as
well as other disorders. What are those effects?
Hollander: There is a group of behaviors that are
self-stimulatory. When patients with autism are bored, they start to do
things like hand-flapping or rocking back and forth to get up to their
optimal level of stimulation. You actually see this in other species if
you restrict input of sensory signals—if you put a tiger in a small
cage, for instance, it will start to pace back and forth. With those
types of behaviors, we saw a big decrease in response to the oxytocin.
There are other, anxiety-related behaviors that seem to respond better
to very low doses of SSRIs. We've also looked at patients with
borderline personality disorder (BPD), who are exquisitely sensitive to
social rejection. What we found was that when they got a single dose of
the intranasal oxytocin in a situation where they had stress, like if
they had to do a mathematical computation in front of other people who
were evaluating them, there was a normalized cortisol response. But
patients with BPD also have impairment in their social decision making,
so in situations where they should be cooperating, they tend to defect,
and in situations where it would make sense to defect, they try to
cooperate. Paradoxically, the oxytocin made that abnormal decision
making even worse. It's possible that the oxytocin was stimulating their
vasopressin receptors.
This means: When they're given oxytocin, patients
with autism aren't as likely to engage in some odd behaviors typical of
the disorder (hand-flapping, rocking), which are thought to keep them
from getting bored. But they do still tend to engage in other behaviors
(hand-washing, compulsively putting things in order), which are more
about staying calm. This second group of behaviors can be decreased by
giving low doses of antidepressants. Oxytocin also has an interesting
effect on patients with another illness, borderline personality
disorder—it helps them by making them less stressed out but hurts them
by causing them to make very bad social decisions, possibly because it
accidentally binds to receptors in the brain linked to aggression.
How long do the effects of the oxytocin last?
Hollander: Even though it's staying in the plasma for a
very brief period of time, we were getting effects in terms of enhanced
social memories that seemed to persist two weeks later. Some of it is
binding to central oxytocin receptors, and by stimulating those, it's
allowing for the laying down of new social memories. Once those are laid
down they seem to persist. So, we had people listen to neutral
sentences, like "The boy went to the store," but we read those sentences
with different tones—happy, sad, angry, or indifferent—and they had to
recognize each tone. They developed an expertise in that. They were
better at identifying the tones two weeks after the oxytocin was given.
We don't know whether it's permanent.
This means: When it comes to correctly identifying
others' emotions and recognizing social cues, oxytocin's effects last at
least two weeks—possibly because while the oxytocin levels are
artificially increased, the brain is better at creating new,
long-lasting memories.
What would happen if nonautistic people used an oxytocin spray?
Hollander: When you show people threatening faces, they
have a marked activation of the amygdala. If you then give those people
oxytocin, they don't get as much amygdala activation, so there's less of
this fight-or-flight, threat, fear response. And normally, you'd get an
elevation in blood pressure, clammy skin. You don't get as much of that
either.
This means: They'd be less scared of things, and probably less stressed.
Do you worry that an oxytocin nasal spray would end up being abused by healthy people if the FDA approved it for treating autism?
Hollander: We're still far away from getting this
approved in the U.S. for the treatment of autism. You'd need to do a
large-scale trial, which hasn't been done yet. But the idea of people
using this as a spray to enhance performance—I certainly wouldn't want
to advocate that. I'm not sure it would be used in a recreational
fashion. It has the potential for decreasing the sensation of social
threat, and for enhancing social reward and reinforcement and
facilitating trust, but I'm not sure it makes people feel euphoric or
high. There are medicines that are on the market for the treatment of
social anxiety disorder, and they don't seem to be abused in a
recreational fashion. I don't see people who are a little shy going out
and using SSRIs at parties. On the other hand, a lot of them do
self-medicate with alcohol.
This means: Well, what he said. We think this message is pretty clear.
Our pharmacists can compound Oxytocin Nasal Spray on your practitioners prescription. Contact one of our professional staff members to see how we can assist you in preparing a prescription of Oxytocin Nasal Spray for your child.