Propionic Acid: a Potential Link Between Pain Perception and Self-injurious Behavior in Autism Spectrum Disorders

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Authors

Alston, Shyron

Issue Date

2015

Type

Thesis

Language

en_US

Keywords

Naturopathy , Propionic acid , Autism

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Abstract

It is speculated that individuals on the autism spectrum who engage in chronic self injurious behaviors have a dysregulation of pain perception in the form of altered pain thresholds, impaired pain expression, and/or disrupted pain signaling. Propionic acid, a short chain fatty acid, is known to alter behavior and gene expression, and modulate immune function. The focus of this paper is to determine whether or not increased levels of propionic acid has an effect—direct or indirect—on pain response, thereby decreasing self-injurious behavior in individuals with ASD. Proper therapeutic nutritional supports for neurologic and gastrointestinal dysfunction may modulate inflammatory and immunological responses, normalizing maladaptive behaviors as well as dampening pain responses.

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This thesis is being archived as a Digitized Shelf Copy for campus access to current students and staff only. We currently cannot provide this open access without the author's permission. If you are the author of this work and desire to provide it open access or wish access removed, please contact the Wahlstrom Library to discuss permission.

Citation

S. Alston, "Propionic Acid: a Potential Link Between Pain Perception and Self-injurious Behavior in Autism Spectrum Disorders", ND dissertation, College of Naturopathic Medicine, Univ. of Bridgeport, Bridgeport, CT, 2015.

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