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Brain Scans Can Spot Early Signs Of Dyslexia, Study Shows

Brain Scan Dyslexia

First Posted: 01/23/2012 7:48 pm Updated: 03/25/2012 5:12 am


* Findings may lead to earlier diagnosis

* Bigger studies needed

By Julie Steenhuysen

CHICAGO, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Instead of waiting for a child to experience reading delays, scientists now say they can identify the reading problem even before children start school, long before they become labeled as poor students and begin to lose confidence in themselves.

Although typically diagnosed during the second or third grade of school - around age 7 or 8 - a team from Children's Hospital Boston said they could see signs of the disease on brain scans in children as early as 4 and 5, a time when studies show children are best able to respond to interventions.

"We call it the dyslexia paradox," said Nadine Gaab of the Laboratories of Cognitive Neuroscience at Children's, whose study was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Gaab said most children are not diagnosed until third grade, but interventions work best in younger children, hopefully before they begin to learn to read.

"Often, by the time they get a diagnosis, they usually have experienced three years of peers telling them they are stupid, parents telling them they are lazy. We know they have reduced self esteem. They are really struggling," Gaab said in a telephone interview.

Her study builds on an emerging understanding of dyslexia as a problem with recognizing and manipulating the individual sounds that form language, which is known as phonological processing.

In order to read, children must map the sounds of spoken language onto specific letters that make up words. Children with dyslexia struggle with this mapping process.

"The beauty is spoken language can present before written language so people can look for symptoms," said Dr. Sally Shaywitz, a director of the Center for Dyslexia and Creativity at Yale University.

Signs of early dyslexia might include difficulty with rhyming, mispronouncing words or confusing similar-sounding words.

"Those are all very early symptoms," Shaywitz said.

Dyslexia affects roughly 5 percent to 17 percent of all children and up to 1 in 2 children with a family history of the disorder will struggle with reading, have poor spelling and experience difficulty decoding words.

In her study, Gaab and colleagues scanned the brains of 36 preschool children while they did a number of tasks, such as trying to decide if two words start with the same sound.

They found that during these tasks, children who had a family history of dyslexia had less brain activity in certain regions of the brain than did children of similar ages, intelligence and socioeconomic status.

Older children and adults with dyslexia have dysfunction in these same areas of the brain, which include the junctions between the occipital and temporal lobes and the temporal and parietal lobes in the back of the brain.

Gaab said the study shows that when children predisposed to dyslexia did these tasks, their brains did not use the area typically used for processing this information. This problem occurred even before the children started learning to read.

"The important point of this paper is it shows the need to look for signs of dyslexia earlier," said April Benasich, director of the Carter Center for Neurocognitive Research at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, who was not part of the study.

Benasich studies language processing in even younger children - babies who have a family history of learning disorders.

"There is evidence to suggest that what is thought to be reading failure is there before the kids fail," she said.

Gaab said her study is too small to form the basis of any test for dyslexia but her team has just won a grant from the National Institutes of Health to do a larger study.

Ultimately, she hopes parents will be able to go to their pediatrician and ask for their child to be assessed.

"Families often know that their child has dyslexia as early as kindergarten, but they can't get interventions at their schools," she said in a statement.

"If we can show that we can identify these kids early, schools may be encouraged to develop programs," she said. (Editing by Bill Trott)

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* Findings may lead to earlier diagnosis * Bigger studies needed By Julie Steenhuysen CHICAGO, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Instead of waiting for a child to experi...
* Findings may lead to earlier diagnosis * Bigger studies needed By Julie Steenhuysen CHICAGO, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Instead of waiting for a child to experi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
user598486
01:50 PM on 01/26/2012
I remember as a kid I use to stammer alot...And I would be laughed at..I remember I could see adults laughing at me. If I didn't unerstand what the teacher was saying I was affard to ask a question fear of being laughed at...At 16 I quit school, and pretty much uneducated...But, I was lucky in life, and my stammer went away as I grew older...And was able to retire at 56yrs. old...
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fpwillson
Fighter for justice and the truth
01:09 PM on 01/26/2012
I used to be dyslexic but now I'm KO.
Did you know that 3 out of 2 pilots are dyslexic?
and so on... Sorry, couldn't hel;p myuself.
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LonaMarie
01:35 PM on 01/26/2012
Bad fp, Bad fp, lol you sure came up with those quick. : )
12:57 PM on 01/26/2012
One reason it "takes so long" to get a diagnosis, is that some children do grow out of some of the symptoms they mention above, such as not being able to rhyme, mispronouncing words, or difficulty with beginning or ending letter sounds. I'm surprised they didn't mention backwards writing (letters/numbers backward -- or writing words backward (pots for stop for example), which again, many children do, and most do grow out of. It's important for early intervention, but at younger ages, this wouldn't necessarily have to be an assessment -- just extra focus on those areas that a child might have difficulty with, and reinforcement. Not every poor speller or poor reader is dyslexic - and not every dyslexic is a poor speller or poor reader (sometimes their issues come in creating/writing words/sentences, or sometimes its' just understanding the written word). Many of the criteria on long list of characteristics for dyslexia (see dyslexia.com) also happen to cross over to kids who have attention issues (ADD or ADHD), auditory issues, sensory integration issues, or connective tissue issues, among other things. That is why it takes time to diagnose. Doctors and teachers, for better or worse, are waiting for developmental milestones to occur - and a child needs to be really on the edge for anyone to say definitively that he/she needs an assessment for dyslexia at a young age.
12:07 PM on 01/26/2012
I just think there should be an inexpensive test that you can give pre-schoolers or during the first days in school that would identify dyslexic children as well as those needed glasses or hearing aids. We seem to always be playing catch up when the crucial learning periods may be passed. As for brain scans, would this be at the expense of medical service that might be health related? Just curious.
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Brogers
01:06 PM on 01/26/2012
I believe properly trained professionals, who care, can spot these children. It requires people to think about the reasons a kid acts a certain way and ask them questions about how they are struggling, not why they won't do things the way everyone else is doing it.
11:59 AM on 01/26/2012
It's fine and dandy to post this story, but I know my two granddaughters have dyslexia, as I think their father has (who dropped out of school in the 6th grade). Unfortunately, I can't get help from the school. They don't have the funding for it. So where do people who don't have alot of money go to get their children help???? It's pass it on to other people................
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Brogers
01:18 PM on 01/26/2012
Your comment breaks my heart - Have you talked to a teacher who you respect? If not I suggest that is a good start and maybe you can come up with a plan that will aid thier learning. Once they do you might be surprised how well they will adapt. I am not a professional just a guy who has been around. No matter what anyone tells you - they can almost surely learn. I suggest they won't learn the way you or others might learn, because from my experience they don't see words and symbols the is the way that is considered normal. Almost assuredly they think of themselves as dumb and not normal. They are not,. Not trying to be an expert ,God Bless.
11:04 AM on 01/26/2012
As a small child, I had a sister 4 1/2 years older than me. While in bed at night, before I entered kindergarten, she would draw letters on my back and I would have to guess the letter and the sound. This then led to small words. I was born in 1947 and there was no treatment for dyslexia. However, I learned to read before entering school--although I wrote everything backwards. I was not legitimately diagnosed until I was about 30. Many years later, I tutored adult GED students who could not read. Used the writing on the back method and it worked! I taught many students to read that way. Dyslexics are far from dummies. I possess a genius IQ in many areas of functioning, and yet fail block assembly. Many of my students had memorized several thousand words by sight. They are not stupid. Our educational/testing system is designed to serve right-handed white males and the "average" student. Many dyslexics are not only highly intelligent, but downright brilliant--Albert Einstein and the artist Rodin being shining examples. We are only labeled "learning disabled" by an educational system that does not understand right-brained thinking.
12:00 PM on 01/26/2012
i agree. the educational systems are almost "backwoods". Rather than letting a child develop WITH dyslexia, they opt to put us in the learning challenged category or recommend drugs to make us more compliant. As an adult with dyslexia, I find myself far more in-depth in my thought processes, somewhat eclectic in many ways (compensation?) and am proud of my uniqueness. Glad my parents didn't opt to label me or treat me (medically) as a "less than". Maybe some day educators and physicians and "experts" will stop recommending that those of us who learn differently be drugged or "analyzed" to death. We are who we are.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Canefighter
I post my thoughts on subjects, not opinions.
10:46 AM on 01/26/2012
Dyslexics untie OOPS, Unite
My wife is Dyslexic and I have seen her deal with it every day.
09:55 AM on 01/26/2012
I have to say, as a parent with a dyslexic child, that no one seems to know what they are talking about. The schools do their best, but my son learns more from his tutor in one hour than he does all day at school. In the beginning, when he was around four, I knew he was having a very difficult time doing letters when compared to his twin sister. It took years to get an official diagnosis, after going through eye therapy (this didn't help at all) and jumping through many hoops that didn't work, which was frustrating for my child and me. My son is in fourth grade now and doing well, thanks to his tutor. I have to agree he thinks outside the box, and if there is a problem, my dyslexic child will be the first to come up with a solution. His brain works differently. It is not a disease, it is a gift to have your brian thinking far more than the average person, although my son does not see it this way yet. Dyslexics tend to see the whole picture, where others can't.
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Brogers
01:33 PM on 01/26/2012
I agree most of what you say, but not that educators are doing thier best. You are doing your child a disservice if you think that child sees the whole picture, no one does. The main reason this is important in my view is that learning takes more time and effort to stay focused when other are using the so called normal method. I agree that being dyslexic can be a gift - but it does not come without significant personal costs. God bless you for your early intervention.
10:25 AM on 01/27/2012
Hi Brogers,
When I wrote whole picture, I did not mean it the way you are taking it. I've read a lot on the subject and from what I learned they say a dyslexic sees things differently. Here's their example. As a non dyslexic, try to imagine a horse in your mind. You see the horse, it's color, and perhaps you are looking at it from a side view in your mind. Now if a dyslexic is told to do the same, the dyslexic will see the picture in three dimensional as we would see it in 2D. They see the entire horse, beneath it and every side, non dyslexics minds do not work this way, dyslexics have far more brain activity going on according to the study I read. They actually show the differences of the brains thinking path in pictures, comparing dyslexics with non dyslexics. Anyway I just wanted to tell you what I meant by my comment. Have a great day.
09:46 AM on 01/26/2012
I sometimes wonder how my life would have been different if my dyslexia was determined before 3rd grade. I was able to hide the fact that I could not read by memorizing passages, determining story line by picture cues, and listening intently and paying attention in class. I was an auditory learner. It took me until 5th grade to catch up with my pears, and a few more years to catch up with vocabulary.
Although I will never know the affects of being called lazy and stupid, I am sure it is very detrimental to kids with low self esteem. I ended up graduating from college with honors. The tricks I learned to hide the fact I couldn't read helped with memorization and interpersonal communication skills. Would I have developed these as much if I was diagnosed earlier?
The brain scan may be able to rule out dyslexia, but what if it shows your child doesn't present symptoms? Do we just keep calling them stupid? My 3rd grade teacher was able to see I had a problem and addressed it. So why didn't my other teachers are parents pay attention.
Read to your kids, get invested in their education, pay attention and then there isn't a need for brain scans.
09:43 AM on 01/26/2012
being an older woman with dyslexia, i find this interesting. Naturally when I was a child there was no diagnosis or label for what I was going through. I still have problems typing and writing and writing numbers. However, I can use a 10 key calculator like nobody s business and can repeat work related conversations word for word. (secretary) I love to read, always have. It just takes me longer and I have to use a bookmark under the lines. I also had speech therapy when I was in elementary school. To this day my ability to carry on a conversation for a long time is very difficult. I see the words in my head but they come out backwards!
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ARMY1775
My micro-bio not visible to naked eye!
09:12 AM on 01/26/2012
?tahW
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acarioti
Al Carioti lives in Orlando, Flo
08:54 AM on 01/26/2012
I no longer suffer from Dyslexia, thank dog!
11:20 AM on 01/26/2012
You mean, "thank doG.".
07:36 AM on 01/25/2012
This research is encouraging and backs up what many parents observe early on in their own children. We noticed all the signs in our sons early speech and even had him assessed by a speech therapist. No one told us that what we were experiencing could be early signs of what many people call dyslexia. We found that out a lot lot later and I felt like we wasted many years that we could have been supporting his learning to read and write better. We definitely saw a disconnect between specialist that work in speech/language therapy and those that support 'learning difficulty/dyslexia' which should not be. So this is encouraging reporting! But please please please don't call dyslexia a disease! It's a different way that the brain functions or is wired and brings with it a lot of strengths, as other recent research points to. Just because we invented writing (and thus reading) which requires the brain to map sounds to symbols... which happens to more challenging for some brains than others... doesn't make it a disease!
11:22 PM on 01/24/2012
The trouble is: we still do not know how to engage exceptional minds.

Instead - we exclude rather than engage, and humiliate than help kids.

Let us hope we teach up to the incredible intelligence students have.
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Brogers
01:35 PM on 01/26/2012
I could not agree more.
07:50 PM on 01/24/2012
I would like to say that dyslexia is not a disease. I was not at ease when I was working with "professionals". But I am at ease now with my ability as "dyslexic" away from the establishment. "Dyslexics" have an amazing ability to think in non-linear ways which most people can't. Hence "dyslexics" move the world forward and the rest come along for the ride. It would make sense that there would be different parts in the brain scan showing. The real question is if those parts are damaged in a "normal"/average person through an injury, do you get a dyslexic? Hmmm... Beware of the big business that is treating dyslexics! Just go to Real Spelling.
07:58 AM on 01/26/2012
Exactly! In general, "dyslexics" contribute in valuable amazing ways. But this is especially true for the gifted "dyslexic". Most schools have no programs for the gifted "learning disabled", and thus, in school, these remarkable kids are not properly supported with appropriate programs. Ironically, a phonics-based reading program is the "intervention" that this new study touts as the "cure" for dyslexia. I have to laugh! Phonics was the baseline reading and writing program in public schools for generations, but was dropped from the curriculum somewhere after the 1960s. I bet the increase in "dyslexic/learning disabled kids" can be charted directly to the loss of phonics-based reading programs in public education.
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denoferth
I have seen things you people wouldn’t believe.
11:52 AM on 01/26/2012
I suspect you might have discovered an important clue, gigil. I wonder how many other times new age "experts" have caused unforeseen catastrophic problems in our society with their meddling.