IdahoRose wrote:
I'll say a sentence normally, and then I'll quietly whisper it again without any conscious thought about it.
I don't repeat entire sentences (at least, not that I know of), but I will sometimes whisper the last word or two of a sentence I've just finished. When it happens, there is no possibility of controlling it. I only become aware of it if I say it loudly enough that I hear it - and I'm pretty sure I don't always notice. It's odd, sometimes even startling, to hear myself saying something when I'm - as far as I'm aware - not speaking. I've been doing this as long as I can remember, and thought that everybody did it (although I can't say I ever heard anybody else do it). I only discovered very recently that this is fairly common in ASD's.
I actually had a google search for palilalia open in another tab. Here's what Encyclopedia.com gives as the
definition:
palilalia (pal-i-lay-liă) n. a disorder of speech in which a word spoken by the individual is rapidly and involuntarily repeated.
As far as treatment is concerned, it appears that there has been at least limited success with trazadone. The only article I have found (so far) which speaks of it in any kind of detail is this
PDF file from the American Journal of Psychiatry] (if you're cautious about clicking links, you can cut-n-paste this:
http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/rep ... 4/580b.pdf instead) It also goes into a more detailed description of the condition. The writer states that, "As yet, no treatments have been found to be particularly helpful," and cites their successful use of trazadone as "atypical".