Nutritional aspects related with casein and gluten comsumption in autism spectrum disorder ASD
Author
Butantan affiliation
Publication type
Article
Language
English
Access rights
Restricted access
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Abstract
The etyology of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is
unknown, involves a complex interaction between multiple
and varied susceptible genes, epygenetic and environmental
factors. The diagnosis is made through clinical evaluation
First-line therapies are psychosocial treatments and
educational interventions. On average 30% of people and
with ASD consumes some drug or supplement. The options
and effectiveness of the treatments are limited and
therefore several lines of alternative treatment have
emerged. The use of dietary restriction to reduce behavioral
symptoms is widespread, with the most popular being the
"theory of excess opioid peptides which postulates that
the consumption of gluten and casein contributes to the
worsening of symptoms and a diet free of these proteins
improves the clinical picture. Despite many data presented
in the literature, there are still doubts about the
mechanisms involved as well as about dietary efficacy For
all of the above, the topical review will address the opioid
system, opioid peptides derived from gluten and casein,
changes in the digestive tract of individuals with ASD,
history of the onset of the theory, physiological mechanisms
involved, brief description of the scientific literature, on the
subject and the perspectives as a therapeutic instrument.
Link to cite this reference
https://repositorio.butantan.gov.br/handle/butantan/5303
Journal title
Keywords
Funding agency
Issue Date
2023
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