What is autism?

What is autism?

Autism is a disorder that occurs in childhood from the first six months, is variable in neurodevelopment, and has a steady course, but without sleep, to prove the disease until the age of three years, and although it continues in adulthood, but it is almost lost in some.

The symptoms of this disease appear in the form of weakness and lack of communication and social interaction, as well as a repetition in a specific behavioral pattern, according to restricted movements, including repeated methods as in the method of food, but these are not associated with the identification of this disease, They have these symptoms, without autism.

People who suffer from autism often have no intuition, and their social connection with people with the same autism is virtually nonexistent, in addition to the community around them.

Children with autism in their early childhood often show little interest in social influences. They rarely look at the faces of others with a small smile. Their eye contact is weak, they rarely notice their names when they hear them, and less interaction with spoken words or simple expressive gestures. They can be used during speech, and even the reference and signification of things are very weak. Autism children rarely care to get in touch with other people, but they can form special relationships with those who care for them.

It is noticeable in this group of children, the weakness of the ability to protect facilities and interest less than the most advanced peers in their mental abilities, or with the infection of this disease, which is still at a minimum.

Research and observation have shown very negative responses to the personal emotions, movements and expressions of children with ASD syndrome, as well as their persistent tendency to loneliness, their reluctance to mix with their peers, and their own in-home world that does not disturb the presence of others , And here we see them fail to form friendships does not mean the presence of friends and do not care to maintain friendships or to establish relationships with them, but rarely, some may be affected by friends and people who had brought them with them by coincidence, for example, a ceremony.

In a study of 67 children about their tantrums, violence and aggression, two-thirds of them had suffered from such episodes even once, and a third of them were in their daily behavior and behavior and were more likely to develop mental illnesses, especially sepsis and psychosis.