Question:
how do you cure the Asperger's Syndrome?
Pasqualina
2013-06-02 14:28:57 UTC
how do you cure the Asperger's Syndrome?
Four answers:
Gui
2013-06-02 14:33:22 UTC
The core signs of Asperger's syndrome can't be cured. However, many children with Asperger's syndrome grow into happy and well-adjusted adults, Most children benefit from early specialized interventions that focus on behavior management and social skills training. Your doctor can help identify resources in your area that may work for your child.



Asperger's syndrome treatment options may include:



Communication and social skills training

Children with Asperger's syndrome may be able to learn the unwritten rules of socialization and communication when taught in an explicit and rote fashion, much like the way students learn foreign languages. Children with Asperger's syndrome may also learn how to speak in a more natural rhythm, as well as how to interpret communication techniques, such as gestures, eye contact, tone of voice, humor and sarcasm.



Cognitive behavioral therapy

This general term encompasses many techniques aimed at curbing problem behaviors, such as interrupting, obsessions, meltdowns or angry outbursts, as well as developing skills such as recognizing feelings and coping with anxiety. Cognitive behavioral therapy usually focuses on training a child to recognize a troublesome situation — such as a new place or an event with lots of social demands — and then select a specific learned strategy to cope with the situation.



Medication

There are no medications that specifically treat Asperger's syndrome. But some medications may improve specific symptoms — such as anxiety, depression or hyperactivity — that can occur in many children with Asperger's syndrome. Examples include:



Aripiprazole (Abilify). This drug may be effective for treating irritability related to Asperger's syndrome. Side effects may include weight gain and an increase in blood sugar levels.

Guanfacine (Intuniv). This medication may be helpful for the problems of hyperactivity and inattention in children with Asperger's syndrome. Side effects may include drowsiness, irritability, headache, constipation and bedwetting.

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Drugs such as fluvoxamine (Luvox) may be used to treat depression or to help control repetitive behaviors. Possible side effects include restlessness and agitation.

Risperidone (Risperdal). This medication may be prescribed for agitation and irritability. It may cause trouble sleeping, a runny nose and an increased appetite. This drug has also been associated with an increase in cholesterol and blood sugar levels.

Olanzapine (Zyprexa). Olanzapine is sometimes prescribed to reduce repetitive behaviors. Possible side effects include increased appetite, drowsiness, weight gain, and increased blood sugar and cholesterol levels.

Naltrexone (Revia). This medication, which is sometimes used to help alcoholics stop drinking, may help reduce some of the repetitive behaviors associated with Asperger's syndrome. However, the use of low-dose naltrexone — in doses as low as two to four mg a day — has been gaining favor recently. But, there's no good evidence that such low doses have any effect on Asperger's syndrome.
anonymous
2013-06-03 03:41:26 UTC
Petrusclavus is correct - for the time being that is - Asperger's Syndrome [URL #1] is an Autism Spectrum Disorder [URL #2] and there has been progressively increasing evidence that Autism Spectrum Disorders are genetically transmitted mental diseases [URL #3] which suggests every individual brain cell is a carrier of the gene, so the patient would have to be killed to be cured.



This might have suited the eugenics policies of the Nazis, but at least one of us, me, would hide somewhere they wouldn't find me and procreate until either my hat blew off or I fell in the water, or the ducks came home.



If the question had been, how do you cure the symptoms of Asperger's Syndrome, a very different scenario would suggest itself because, now that it has been established that the old notion of the brain being 'hard-wired' for life has been proven incorrect [URL #4] [URL #5] [URL #6] and is instead malleable or plastic, techniques like Cognitive Behavioural Therapy [URL #7] and Neuro-Linguistic Programming [URL #8] hold out considerable hope that some if not all of the psychological symptoms will become remediable.
Miss Kitti
2013-06-02 21:36:57 UTC
You don't cure it. However, if somebody grows up without knowing they have it, the signs are hardly there at all.Because they don't have 'special treatment'. They're treated the same as anyone else. So I guess it's a partial cure?
?
2013-06-02 21:29:32 UTC
There is no cure - only remediation.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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