Neurol. praxi. 2010;11(6):370-372

Role of testosterone in the etiology of autism - the hypothesis of a hypermale brain

doc.MUDr.Daniela Ostatníková, Ph.D.1, RNDr.Silvia Lakatošová, Ph.D.1, RNDr.Eva Schmidtová, Ph.D.1, Mgr.Peter Krajmer1, MUDr.Ing.Mgr.Peter Celec, Ph.D., MPH2
1 Fyziologický ústav, Lekárska fakulta, Univerzita Komenského, Bratislava
2 Ústav molekulárnej BioMediciny, Lekárska fakulta, Univerzita Komenského, Bratislava

Autism is a complex pervasive developmental disorder with early childhood onset characterized by social deficits, impaired communication

and stereotyped behaviour. The disorder has increasing prevalence, enormous variability of symptoms and unknown etiology.

Generally the disorder is diagnosed four times more often in boys than in girls and this provokes theories relating autism to testosterone

effect. The theory of hypermale brain considers disturbed neurodevelopment with consequent structural brain anomalies and atypical

development of brain hemispheres leading to autistic phenotype.

Keywords: autism, hypermale brain, laterality, testosterone

Published: December 31, 2010  Show citation

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Ostatníková D, Lakatošová S, Schmidtová E, Krajmer P, Celec P. Role of testosterone in the etiology of autism - the hypothesis of a hypermale brain. Neurol. praxi. 2010;11(6):370-372.
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