Does Piracetam actually help autistic child?
My child is 33 months olf as of jan 2016 and autistic.
His peditrician prescribes Piracetam as a medicine.
Does it actually help? What I see in my child is that his hyperactivity is still there, but his actions can somewhat be guided by others now, but still mostly not communicating verbally. He can give me food containers to open, but don't say to me to open it, just showing annoyance when I don't open it quickly.
The results of my Google scholar search on that were kind of odd.
I only found 1 actual study:
http://tinyurl.com/jmq3s8b
It found a slight positive effect, but fairly minimal. Plus, all subjects were taking risperidone as well.
Then I found a pile of studies citing that one as evidence that piracetam was an 'established' treatment for autism, which is really strange. One study doesn't make a treatment established.
However, I'd say regardless of the research base, look at what impact it's having on your son. Maybe try taking him off it for awhile (with the pediatrician's guidance - never change meds without talking to a doctor!) and see if you notice him getting worse. If so, put him back on it.
It can be especially tough to tell if a treatment is effective on a child, because children normally improve their skills over time regardless of what you do. But if the improvement slows or reverses when he's not on the med, then you know the med is working.
Similar Topics | |
---|---|
NO ASD but social ineptitude in child with NVLD - possible? |
21 Jun 2025, 7:24 am |
Autistic families and autistic individuals in NT families |
15 Jun 2025, 10:02 pm |
A part of me wants marriage, child etc, a part of me doesn't |
22 May 2025, 11:26 pm |
The Autistic Self |
19 Jun 2025, 8:03 pm |