Abstract

Although intracranial pressure is considered to be normal in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), we aimed to assess whether such children may have increased intracranial pressure using noninvasive computed tomography (CT). Head CT scans of children with ASD (109 cases, male 91 and female 18, average age 4.3 years) and of children with typical development (60 cases, male 35 and female 25, average age 4.5 years) were acquired. The images were processed to map the shape of the inner skull surface. We predicted that a complex skull shape, based on a marked digital impression, would be indicative of chronically increased intracranial pressure. The data of the scans were extracted and processed to automatically establish inner and outer cranial circumferences. The circularity (reflecting inner skull shape and area) and C-ratio (ratio of inner/outer circumference) were determined and statistically analyzed. The circularity and C-ratio were significantly lower in children with ASD than in children with typical development. A lower circularity was associated with a more complex shape of the inner skull surface, which indicated the presence of intracranial hypertension. Our study suggests that children with ASD may be at a risk for chronic intracranial hypertension. Our technique incorporating the circularity and C-ratio is a useful noninvasive method for screening such patients and could impact future investigations of ASD.

Highlights

  • Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder with unclear etiology, but it has been considered an endogenous disease involving multiple factors [1,2]

  • Craniosynostosis is associated with a chronic elevation of intracranial pressure (ICP), and the associated developmental disturbance in the brain has been implicated in the development of ASD [4,5,6]

  • Most of the published studies have found that both brain volume and cranial volume are larger in children with ASD than in those included in control groups; some studies have conducted detailed analysis based on age, sex, body weight, and other variables and have yielded similar findings

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Summary

Introduction

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder with unclear etiology, but it has been considered an endogenous disease involving multiple factors [1,2]. There are reports of larger cerebral volume, larger ventricles, and larger head circumference than in typically developing cases [7,8,9,10,11,12,13], and most of these reports indicate that intracranial volume is larger than in typically developing cases. This could possibly suggest an elevation of ICP. There have been no reports that clearly demonstrate elevated ICP and its mechanism

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