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Dive into the research topics where Maria Valicenti-McDermott is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Valicenti-McDermott.


Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 2006

Frequency of gastrointestinal symptoms in children with autistic spectrum disorders and association with family history of autoimmune disease

Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Kathryn McVicar; Isabelle Rapin; Barry K. Wershil; Herbert J. Cohen; Shlomo Shinnar

ABSTRACT. This is a cross-sectional study that compares lifetime prevalence of gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms in children with autistic spectrum disorders (ASDs) and children with typical development and with other developmental disabilities (DDs) and examines the association of GI symptoms with a family history of autoimmune disease. A structured interview was performed in 50 children with ASD and 2 control groups matched for age, sex, and ethnicity-50 with typical development and 50 with other DDs. Seventy-four percent were boys with a mean age of 7.6 years (SD, ±3.6). A history of GI symptoms was elicited in 70% of children with ASD compared with 28% of children with typical development (p <.001) and 42% of children with DD (p =.03). Abnormal stool pattern was more common in children with ASD (18%) than controls (typical development: 4%, p =.039; DD: 2%, p =.021). Food selectivity was also higher in children with ASD (60%) compared with those with typical development (22%, p =.001) and DD (36%, p =.023). Family history of autoimmune disease was reported in 38% of the ASD group and 34% of controls and was not associated with a differential rate of GI symptoms. In the multivariate analysis, autism (adjusted odds ratio (OR), 3.8; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.7-11.2) and food selectivity (adjusted OR, 4.1; 95% CI, 1.8-9.1) were associated with GI symptoms. Children with ASD have a higher rate of GI symptoms than children with either typical development or other DDs. In this study, there was no association between a family history of autoimmune disease and GI symptoms in children with ASD.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2012

Age at diagnosis of autism spectrum disorders.

Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Kathryn Hottinger; Rosa Seijo; Lisa Shulman

Early identification of autism has become a national priority but, despite efforts, there are children who are being identified at a later age. In this study, children of Hispanic and African American origin, foreign-born children, and children born to foreign mothers were more likely to be diagnosed later.


Pediatric Neurology | 2008

Gastrointestinal Symptoms in Children with an Autism Spectrum Disorder and Language Regression

Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Kathryn McVicar; Herbert J. Cohen; Barry K. Wershil; Shlomo Shinnar

Few studies have compared gastrointestinal problems in children with an autism spectrum disorder with and without a history of language regression. A cross-sectional study was conducted with structured interviews in 100 children with autism spectrum disorder, using a gastrointestinal questionnaire and a familial autoimmune questionnaire. By parental report, children with language regression more frequently exhibited an abnormal stool pattern (40% vs 12%, P = 0.006) and had an increased family history of celiac disease or inflammatory bowel disease (24% vs 0%, P = 0.001) and of rheumatoid arthritis (30% vs 11%, P = 0.03). Among 35 children with a family history of autoimmune disease, an abnormal stool pattern was reported more frequently in those with language regression (78% vs 15%, P = 0.001) than in those without. An association was observed between children with language regression, a family history of autoimmune disease, and gastrointestinal symptoms. Additional studies are needed to examine a possible shared autoimmune process.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Mosaic Epigenetic Dysregulation of Ectodermal Cells in Autism Spectrum Disorder

Esther R. Berko; Masako Suzuki; Faygel Beren; Christophe Lemetre; Christine M. Alaimo; R. Brent Calder; Karen Ballaban-Gil; Batya Gounder; Kaylee Kampf; Jill Kirschen; Shahina Maqbool; Zeineen Momin; David M. Reynolds; Natalie Russo; Lisa Shulman; Edyta Stasiek; Jessica Tozour; Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Shenglong Wang; Brett S. Abrahams; Joseph Hargitai; Dov Inbar; Zhengdong D. Zhang; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Sophie Molholm; John J. Foxe; Robert W. Marion; Adam Auton; John M. Greally

DNA mutational events are increasingly being identified in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but the potential additional role of dysregulation of the epigenome in the pathogenesis of the condition remains unclear. The epigenome is of interest as a possible mediator of environmental effects during development, encoding a cellular memory reflected by altered function of progeny cells. Advanced maternal age (AMA) is associated with an increased risk of having a child with ASD for reasons that are not understood. To explore whether AMA involves covert aneuploidy or epigenetic dysregulation leading to ASD in the offspring, we tested a homogeneous ectodermal cell type from 47 individuals with ASD compared with 48 typically developing (TD) controls born to mothers of ≥35 years, using a quantitative genome-wide DNA methylation assay. We show that DNA methylation patterns are dysregulated in ectodermal cells in these individuals, having accounted for confounding effects due to subject age, sex and ancestral haplotype. We did not find mosaic aneuploidy or copy number variability to occur at differentially-methylated regions in these subjects. Of note, the loci with distinctive DNA methylation were found at genes expressed in the brain and encoding protein products significantly enriched for interactions with those produced by known ASD-causing genes, representing a perturbation by epigenomic dysregulation of the same networks compromised by DNA mutational mechanisms. The results indicate the presence of a mosaic subpopulation of epigenetically-dysregulated, ectodermally-derived cells in subjects with ASD. The epigenetic dysregulation observed in these ASD subjects born to older mothers may be associated with aging parental gametes, environmental influences during embryogenesis or could be the consequence of mutations of the chromatin regulatory genes increasingly implicated in ASD. The results indicate that epigenetic dysregulatory mechanisms may complement and interact with DNA mutations in the pathogenesis of the disorder.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2013

Language Differences Between Monolingual English and Bilingual English-Spanish Young Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders

Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Nancy Tarshis; Melissa Schouls; Molly Galdston; Kathryn Hottinger; Rosa Seijo; Lisa Shulman; Shlomo Shinnar

Bilingualism is common worldwide and increasingly prevalent, but there is little information about bilingual children with autism spectrum disorder. The goal of the study was to compare expressive and receptive language skills in monolingual English and bilingual English-Spanish children with autism spectrum disorder. A review of the multidisciplinary evaluations done in toddlers who were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder at a university-affiliated center between 2003 and 2010 was performed. Data included demographics, developmental testing, autistic characteristics, and expressive and receptive language skills, obtained from formal speech and language evaluation. A total of 80 toddlers were identified, 40 classified as bilingual English-Spanish. Compared with monolinguals, bilingual children were more likely to vocalize and utilize gestures, with no other differences in language skills. There were no differences in cognitive functioning and autistic features between the groups. In this study, bilingualism did not negatively affect language development in young children with autism spectrum disorder.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2013

Rett syndrome: an eye‐tracking study of attention and recognition memory

Susan A. Rose; Aleksandra Djukic; Jeffery J. Jankowski; Judith F. Feldman; Iris Fishman; Maria Valicenti-McDermott

The aim of this study was to examine attention and recognition memory for faces and patterns in Rett syndrome, a severely disabling neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations in the X‐linked MECP2 gene.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2014

Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Children With Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities Associations With Ethnicity, Child Comorbid Symptoms, and Parental Stress

Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Bethany Burrows; Leora Bernstein; Kathryn Hottinger; Katharine R. Lawson; Rosa Seijo; Merryl Schechtman; Lisa Shulman; Shlomo Shinnar

The use of complementary and alternative medicine by children with autism and the association of its use with child comorbid symptoms and parental stress was studied in an ethnically diverse population, in a cross-sectional study with structured interviews. The sample included 50 families of children with autism and 50 families of children with other developmental disabilities, matched by age/gender. Interview included the Complementary and Alternative Medicine Questionnaire, Gastrointestinal Questionnaire, Children’s Sleep Habits Questionnaire, Aberrant Behavior Checklist, and Parenting Stress Index. In this ethnically diverse sample, the use of complementary and alternative medicine was significantly higher for the autism group. In the autism group, use was significantly related to child’s irritability, hyperactivity, food allergies, and parental stress; in the developmental disabilities group, there was no association with child comorbid symptoms or parental stress. The results contribute information to health care providers about families of children with autism who are more likely to use complementary and alternative medicine.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2015

Parental Stress in Families of Children With Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities

Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Katharine R. Lawson; Kathryn Hottinger; Rosa Seijo; Merryl Schechtman; Lisa Shulman; Shlomo Shinnar

The level of parental stress in families of children with autism and other developmental disabilities and its association with child comorbid symptoms was studied in an ethnically diverse population, in a cross-sectional study with structured interview. The sample included 50 families of children with autism and 50 families of children with other developmental disabilities, matched by age/gender. Interview included Parenting Stress Index–Short Form, Gastrointestinal Questionnaire, Child Sleep Habits Questionnaire, and Aberrant Behavior Checklist. In this ethnically diverse sample, parental stress was significantly higher for the autism group and for non-Hispanic and US-born mothers. In both study groups, parental stress was related to child irritability. Parental stress was also related to gastrointestinal problems in the autism group and to sleep difficulties in the developmental disabilities group. Targeting child irritability may be particularly important in reducing parental stress for families of children with autism and other developmental disabilities.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2013

Effects from Birth Brachial Plexus Injury and Postural Control

Elizabeth Ridgway; Maria Valicenti-McDermott; Lillian Kornhaber; Dona Rani Kathirithamby; Harriet Wieder

Of 32 children with birth brachial plexus injury, 31 had postural control deficits, including asymmetrical posture and atypical movements. Management of children with birth brachial plexus injury should address motor development of the entire body, not merely the affected extremity.


Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 2006

Clinical Features of Young Children with Autistic Spectrum Disorders With and Without a Reported History of Regression

Lisa Shulman; Oscar H. Purugganan; Nancy Tarshis; Maria Valicenti-McDermott; May Chan

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Lisa Shulman

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Rosa Seijo

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Shlomo Shinnar

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Kathryn Hottinger

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Nancy Tarshis

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Herbert J. Cohen

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Katharine R. Lawson

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Kathryn McVicar

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Merryl Schechtman

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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