Abstract

The aim of this study is to investigate prenatal, perinatal, and postnatal factors, screen time in a group of patients with ASD and age and sex-matched clinical controls to evaluate risk factors specific to ASD. The study included 211 ASD patients (177 boys, 34 girls; mean age 44.3±13.0 months) and 241 (190 boys, 51 girls; mean age 44.6±14.1 months) age and sex group matched clinical controls. Non-ASD diagnoses were expressive language disorder (n=135, 56.0 %), intellectual disability (n=15, 6.2%), attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (n=6, 2.4%), oppositional disorder (n=6, 2.4%), and other behavioral or emotional problems (no diagnosis) (n=79, 32.8%). A sociodemographic data form was used to collect data regarding pre-, peri-, and postnatal factors and total daily screen exposure. According to our findings, maternal severe psychological stress and depression during pregnancy, and maternal postpartum depression were more frequent in the ASD group (p=0.005, p=0.035, and p=0.001 respectively). There was a statistically significant difference between groups with regards to maternal any medication use during pregnancy (p=0.004). The mean duration of daily screen exposure was higher in the ASD group (9.90±5.10 hours) compared to non-ASD children (4.46±3.40 hours) (p<0.001). A ROC curve showed that 8.5 hours and above total daily screen exposure (AUC=0.808 [95%CI, 0.769-0.848], p<000; 55% sensitivity, 90.5% specificity) is likely to be associated with increased risk for ASD. Our study suggests that prenatal maternal psychological stress, prenatal and postpartum depression, and excess exposure to screen might be related to an increased risk for ASD.

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