29 answers

Ultrasounds and Autism or Speech Delay?

Hi Moms,

I am pregnant with baby #2 and have high blood pressure. Because of this I've been having a LOT of ultrasounds - so many I can't count anymore. I've been reading a lot about ultrasounds causing brain damage and being a possible cause of increased rates of autism and speech-delayed children. Have any moms out there had a bunch of ultrasounds while pregnant and gone on to have healthy children? Are there moms out there who had no ultrasounds or just 1 -2 who have children with autism or who were speech-delayed?

Thanks all.

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Featured Answers

Hi S.,
I had an ultrasound almost every time I went to see my Dr. when I was pregnant. I went a lot. I thought everyone did but later found out some people only have a few the whole time. My daughter is three now and very verbal. She started talking when she was under a year old and has a huge vocabulary and never stops talking. She is a very social kid and seems to be developing typically. I had never heard of the links between ultrasounds and brain damage.There is so much to worry about when you are pregnant. Try not to let it drive you crazy and good luck!
K.

I had placenta privia just had a healthy baby girl two and a half weeks ago hoping she stays that way I haven't heard anything about ultrasounds I had a lot if them too hope it's safe.

More Answers

I don't think you need to be worried. I am from Germany and there the OB-Gyns do the ultrasounds themselves and do one for EVERY visit during the whole pregnancy, about 15 to 20. In Germany the autism rate is 1 in 1500, here in the US it is 1 in 91. If you ask me (I am an autism mom myself), I would be much more worried about the large amounts of vaccines that they give here (too many, too early!) in comparison to countries with much lower autism rates.

3 moms found this helpful

I hope that this does not spread, because it would be too bad if parents avoided another measure of standard medical care that could be lifesaving because of specilation, anecdote an coincidence. Possiblity can be at the farest end of probablity, all kinds of improbable things are possible, but not worthy of anxiety.

Causality for a complicated condition like autism is not going to be as simple as one procedure (that almost everyone has at a "suspect" time) Even if there is a correlation, that is a long way from a cause, and may mean nothing more than nearly every child who is born today has been subject to ultra sound, the mulitple reasons for a preganacy to need multiple ultrasound makes the correletaion that much more suspect. The point of reputable research is to tease out all the coincidetal and anedotal evidence and get real, repeatable results that will eventially lead to an answer that is based on all the evidence. By guessing at one single coincidence, it is like feeling the tail of the elephant blindlfolded and making an ID.

Dont waste your time worrying about this, even if you think you see a "cause" in the anedotes you collect, your child will still have a 1 in 110 risk of developing autsim just by being born. It is now 1 in 99 if your child is a boy. It is human nature to try and find someone or something to blame, and the fear of the unknown feeds people to try to find a way to prevent this outcome. You can't. If it effects your family, it won't go away if you can blame something as cause and treatment are not linked either, and even if you get to the point where you feel strongly about who the "guilty" party is, you will not feel any better about it if your child is autistic; in some cases, I think people feel worse if they can vent about something that they think hurt thier child, you are much better equiped if you can move forward instead. I think this trend even leads parents to more self blame and guilt, because they start to beleive that they should have prevented it.

If you are still seeking anecdote, my 18 year old had one ultrasound, and is autistic. She also went to the circus, ate chicken, peas, pears, bananas, stubbed her toe, was sung to, had stiches, and many other shared childhood expereinces, but I choose to accept the unknown and our genetics as the cause, which is why she is participating the the Autism gene research project, AGRE. They just annouced a break through genetic discovery this week, and you would be much better off reading about that, and joining the project if you turn out to be one of the few for whom autism is reality, than you will be to look to speculation and unecessary worry.

Keep your blood pressure low by refusing to buy into this and think possitive thoughts about your pregnancy and know what the developmental milestones are, never wait and see if you think you have a problem, and get the earliest intervention that you can muster or afford if your child is one of the 1 in 110. You don't have to think about that today, and you might want to read trashy magazines instead of seaching the internet until your baby is born, just to keep your blood presure down!

Good luck with your new baby and enjoy being Mommy to number #1.

M.

3 moms found this helpful

I think the ultrasound link is probably a lot like the vaccine link. Almost everyone who has a child with autism has had ultrasounds and got their child vaccinated... but so did almost everyone else. Statistically speaking there isn't a correlation, but emotionally some people's guts just feel like there is a link.

There IS some correlative data, however that links advanced PATERNAL age and Autism, but again, that's a link not a cause.

Enjoy your baby. Don't spend your pregnancy worried about what might be. Your child will be exactly the one that you were meant to have.

HTH
T.

2 moms found this helpful

I am currently doing research for an assignment on Autism for my Master's degree. I had not come across anything pertaining to your question...until this morning. I was shocked and disturbed that I was never informed of this. My last pregnancy was high-risk and I kept loosing amniotic fluid towards the last 4 months of pregnancy so I had to have a ultrasound every week until the substitute doctor decided to induce labor the day of the last ultrasound or my daughter would've died.

She suffered from speech delays and delayed milestones. I never thought that ultra sounds would cause that until I read it. This is disturbing and I do not want to alarm you, but everyone needs to know this..

http://www.midwiferytoday.com/articles/ultrasoundrodgers.asp

Nanc

2 moms found this helpful

I had 19 ultrasounds with my pregnancy and my daughter is beautiful, bright, and healthy!

1 mom found this helpful

My step-mom had no ultrasounds with my little sister, who is turning 18 next month, and she has severe autism. (to the point that's it's like she's a 2 yr old...) There are MANY people who have had alot of sonos during their pregnancy and I've never heard this that ultrasound causes brain damage. Don't believe everything you read.....

1 mom found this helpful

This might sound terrible, but we were living in a devleloping country while I was preg with my DD. There wasn't a lot of info available to us at that point, and ultras were only $25 a pop. Our OB had just gotten a new machine and it was like a toy to her so we had one at nearly every visit, plus a 3-d image made at the end b/c they said she was "overdue."

She was raised bilingual and by the age of 2 spoke both languages better than any monolingual kid of the same age spoke just one of those languages. So if it does affect language centers of the brain, well, it did not for her.

She's still bilingual, even though we moved from that country when she was 3. Most of the kids we know who were raised bilingual for years then left lost one language. She's got a particular gift for tongues, I guess, ultrasound notwithstanding.

She definately does not have autism.

My understanding of USs is that no one reallly knows if they can cause any harm, but as of yet there is no conclusive evidence that they do.

1 mom found this helpful

I had both my girls in Germany, where when you have private insurance they will take an US about every visit. Being insured by the US Army, I am considered private insured. I had about 20 each with them (they were born nearly 7 years apart) and as of now there are no developmental issues (granted the little one is only 14 months) But this is the norm here with ultrasounds and I don't think there are a lot of kids with Autism. My older daugther was also raised bilingual, speaks both german and english fluently, goes to a german elementary school and just taught herself to read english!
Just relax, ask your OBGYN if all the US are necessary as you are concerned and he/she should be able to give you more info as well!
Here is hoping to an uneventful and nice pregnancy and delivery!

1 mom found this helpful

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