Friday, November 19, 2010

My Dad Bought Me...

My Dad and I tried to start our Christmas shopping early. So we went to Old Navy last week. And I seen this shirt.



I really liked it. They also have it in purples, greens, and blues. But I liked this one. And I really liked the owls. But I didn't want to ask my Dad for it. Because it's getting close to Christmas.

My abuelita and I were looking on the computer yesterday, and I showed it to her. She liked it too. I don't have a lot of regular clothes. Since I go to Catholic school and I have to wear a uniform.

But my Dad surprised me today. He bought me this shirt. And a pair of jeans. Just because. That's what he told me. I think I'm going to save them for our trip to Texas next month. :) C

121 MIL VISITAS...CURIOSA É DEMAIS!!!



ESTOU MUITO FELIZ. CURIOSA COMEMORANDO 121 MIL VISITAS. GRAÇAS A VOCÊ A CURIOSA CONTINUA MUITO CURIOSA.
MUITO OBRIGADA PELA VINDA.
MAIS UMA DAS CONQUISTAS JUNTINHO DE
TI.

ESTE SELINHO É PARA TODOS OS OLHINHOS CHEIOS DE CARINHOS QUE SEMPRE PASSAM POR AQUI. MUITO OBRIGADA...



AGRADEÇO A SUA COMPANHIA!!!Clique Aqui e veja mais imagens

MEUS MIMOS/SEUS PRESENTES- VOU TE ESPERAR POR LÁ.
UM LINDO SELO RECEBIDO -

Thursday, November 18, 2010

AMIGO SECRETO CHEGANDO!!!!


Nosso Amigo secreto está chegando. DIA 23 JÁ É A SEMANA QUE VEM
Vai ser muito legal. Estou muito ansiosa para saber quem me pegou.. E também para revelar o meu amigo Secreto...
Estamos assim, todas nas nuvens de tanta alegria.!!!!

GRANDE BEIJO PARA TODAS VOCÊS!!!

Ester e suas amigas

PROMOÇAÕ DO BLOG... UNI VER SOS.

ESTOU MUITO CURIOSA PARA SABER QUEM RETIROU O MEU NOME.. SABE QUEM EU PEGUEI???? UMA LINDA PESSOA... ELA É A.... ACHOU QUE EU IA TE CONTAR!!!!! RSRSRSRSRSR.
SOMENTE NO DIA 23 DE NOVEMBRO...
veja quem são as amigas..

Amigo Secreto Virtual de Fim de Ano e Aniversário do Blog

Lista do Amigo Secreto:

1 - Ester - Uni ver sos
2 - SamVou te contar
3 - IsadoraTantos caminhos
4 - Valéria Gomes - Cio da Lua
5 - Sil“Entre Aspas”
6 - Zil MarRecomeçar
7 - Mi Satake É legal, é poético
8 - MariBrincando com a rima
9 - LiliaAndanças
10 - Lisflor de lis
11 - Regina LauraNo balanço das horas
12 - ValeriaAlgodão doce
13 - TatianaSimplesmente amor
14 - Rosane Marega - Blog Rosane Marega
15 - MarcinhaMeus pensamentos
16 - ChicaSementes da Chica
17 - SileneCantinho da Silene
18 - Sandra - Curiosa
19 - Maria - Ofertando flores
20 - Livinha - Palavras e Poemas
21 - Lara Amaral - Teatro da Vida
22 - Ana - Pelos Caminhos da Vida
23 - Eliana - Coisas Boas da Vida
24 - Fernanda - Aleatoriamente
Recados para Orkut de Amigo eterno

AGRADEÇO A SUA COMPANHIA!!!Clique Aqui e veja mais imagens

MEUS MIMOS/SEUS PRESENTES- VOU TE ESPERAR POR LÁ.
UM LINDO SELO RECEBIDO -

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Going to Disney World



Today my Dad told me that we're going to go visit my Nono for Christmas break. I'm so excited! We leave the day after Christmas.

We're going to go spend New Year's in Disney World. But I'm more excited about seeing my Nono. We always have so much fun! This is my Christmas present from my Nono.

I just wish that my grandmas would come with us. But they don't want to travel during the holidays. And they don't really like all the walking that you have to do. But we will bring them back lots of stuff! :) C

UM PRESENTE MUITO ESPECIAL..


DEIXO AQUI UM PRESENTE BEM ESPECIAL PARA O MEU QUERIDO AMIGO JOÃO, QUE FESTEJOU O SEU ANIVERSÁRIO COM MUITA CATEGORIA, JUNTO AOS AMIGOS AQUI NA CURIOSA.

PARA VOCÊ AMIGO..
UM PRESENTE CHEIO DE AMOR..PAZ, ESPERANÇA, ALEGRIA E MUITA SAÚDE.
FLORES PARA PERFUMAR AINDA MAIS A SUA VIDA.
SEJA MUITO FELIZ..
ACEITE DE CORAÇÃO ESTE PEQUENO GESTO DE ALGUÉM QUE LHE ESTIMA MUITO.


AGRADEÇO A SUA COMPANHIA NESTA LINDA FESTA. QUE BOM QUE VOCÊ VEIO E SE DIVERTIU. MUITO OBRIGADA MEUS AMIGOS.


Recados para Orkut de Amigo eterno

AGRADEÇO A SUA COMPANHIA!!!Clique Aqui e veja mais imagens

MEUS MIMOS/SEUS PRESENTES- VOU TE ESPERAR POR LÁ.
UM LINDO SELO RECEBIDO -


Autism Following Viral Infection

I just discovered a remarkable case report from 1986 about a Swedish girl who developed all of the major symptoms of autism at the age of 14, following a severe brain infection.

Autism generally becomes noticeable in early childhood. There are plenty of cases in which autistic people don't get diagnosed until much later in life, but the symptoms invariably turn out to go back a long way. Older children, teenagers and adults don't just go autistic overnight. Except in this case, if you believe it.

The patient, "A", was born to healthy parents and developed perfectly normally, though she was described as somewhat shy. Just before her 14th birthday, she became ill with what at first seemed to be nothing more than a fever and mild headache.

However, a week later, she developed a severe headache and had a seizure. After being rushed to hospital, she was unconscious for a few hours and then awoke, tired but fairly lucid. However, her recovery was only temporary:
On day 6 there was a severe aggravation of symptoms and she became confused, part of the time verbally and physically aggressive, at other times tired and apathetic. She kept complaining of the headache.
These complaints would be perhaps the last time she would use language appropriately for the purposes of communication.
From day 10 she became autistic, reacting not to people but to pain. She would avert her gaze when approached. She was still febrile.... From day 12 to day 19 she was sometimes comatose and sometimes awake, "looking through people with her empty staring gaze," in the words of her mother (day 18) according to the medical records. She reacted with a pained facial expression even to rather slight noises (day 19).
She then began to recover some of her faculties, but only some:
On day 33: "lying in bed, accepting food orally for the first time, avoiding gaze contact but looking around her when she is not observed. Obviously sensitive to smells and taste. Empty, autistic like gaze."

Day 40: "still quite 'fenced-off' but manipulated small objects with great skill. She echoed what nurses and mother said to her. Wrote simple words. Laughed in odd situations and raged with anger without obvious cause."

Day 45: "autistic, not responding to social interactions, but echoing long phrases and sometimes chatting away in a cocktail party fashion."
Autism is defined by a 'triad' of symptoms: difficulties with social interaction; difficulties with communication; and insistence on sameness, or repetitive interests and behaviours.

Of these, it's perhaps not surprising that brain damage could cause the first two. We socialize and communicate with our brains, so of course damage could cause difficulties. What makes this case remarkable is that the patient also developed the third element of triad, repetitive behaviours.
From day 70 bilateral flapping stereotypies of the hands were observed. She had also had bouts when she would laugh intensively and jump up and down, surreptitiously... She would carry with her small plastic objects and protest if these were removed. She would scream for hours if daily routines were changed in any way.
10 years later, when the case report was written, her condition had changed only slightly.
At the age of 22 years she moved to a small group home for mentally retarded persons... The most severe problem nowadays is her insistence on sameness. She absolutely refuses to go to the bathroom and screams for a quarter of an hour every morning before she finally accepts... Then she refuses to leave the bathroom and screams for another quarter of an hour. This pattern is followed every day without fail and intrudes on almost all activities of daily life.
What happened to her? She suffered from herpes simplex encephalitis, a viral infection of the brain. X-rays at the age of 22 showed serious damage to the temporal lobes of the brain, extending to parts of the parietal lobes. (No pictures were provided, however.)

Can her case really be described as a "typical autistic syndrome"? Certainly, there are striking similarities, from the obsessive routines, to the echolalia (repeating what other people say), to the avoidance of eye contact, all classic symptoms of severe autism.

Of course it's always possible that the case report was written to accentuate these similarities, in order to make a nice publication. There have been a handful of other similar cases, though the same caveats apply. Still, if we do accept that these patients are indeed autistic, the implications for understanding the neurobiology of "normal" autism are obvious.

Link: "The Man With Half A Brain" who developed a rather different pattern of symptoms after herpes encephalitis.


ResearchBlogging.orgGillberg, C. (1986). Brief report: Onset at age 14 of a typical autistic syndrome. A case report of a girl with herpes simplex encephalitis Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 16 (3), 369-375 DOI: 10.1007/BF01531665

Autism Following Viral Infection

I just discovered a remarkable case report from 1986 about a Swedish girl who developed all of the major symptoms of autism at the age of 14, following a severe brain infection.

Autism generally becomes noticeable in early childhood. There are plenty of cases in which autistic people don't get diagnosed until much later in life, but the symptoms invariably turn out to go back a long way. Older children, teenagers and adults don't just go autistic overnight. Except in this case, if you believe it.

The patient, "A", was born to healthy parents and developed perfectly normally, though she was described as somewhat shy. Just before her 14th birthday, she became ill with what at first seemed to be nothing more than a fever and mild headache.

However, a week later, she developed a severe headache and had a seizure. After being rushed to hospital, she was unconscious for a few hours and then awoke, tired but fairly lucid. However, her recovery was only temporary:
On day 6 there was a severe aggravation of symptoms and she became confused, part of the time verbally and physically aggressive, at other times tired and apathetic. She kept complaining of the headache.
These complaints would be perhaps the last time she would use language appropriately for the purposes of communication.
From day 10 she became autistic, reacting not to people but to pain. She would avert her gaze when approached. She was still febrile.... From day 12 to day 19 she was sometimes comatose and sometimes awake, "looking through people with her empty staring gaze," in the words of her mother (day 18) according to the medical records. She reacted with a pained facial expression even to rather slight noises (day 19).
She then began to recover some of her faculties, but only some:
On day 33: "lying in bed, accepting food orally for the first time, avoiding gaze contact but looking around her when she is not observed. Obviously sensitive to smells and taste. Empty, autistic like gaze."

Day 40: "still quite 'fenced-off' but manipulated small objects with great skill. She echoed what nurses and mother said to her. Wrote simple words. Laughed in odd situations and raged with anger without obvious cause."

Day 45: "autistic, not responding to social interactions, but echoing long phrases and sometimes chatting away in a cocktail party fashion."
Autism is defined by a 'triad' of symptoms: difficulties with social interaction; difficulties with communication; and insistence on sameness, or repetitive interests and behaviours.

Of these, it's perhaps not surprising that brain damage could cause the first two. We socialize and communicate with our brains, so of course damage could cause difficulties. What makes this case remarkable is that the patient also developed the third element of triad, repetitive behaviours.
From day 70 bilateral flapping stereotypies of the hands were observed. She had also had bouts when she would laugh intensively and jump up and down, surreptitiously... She would carry with her small plastic objects and protest if these were removed. She would scream for hours if daily routines were changed in any way.
10 years later, when the case report was written, her condition had changed only slightly.
At the age of 22 years she moved to a small group home for mentally retarded persons... The most severe problem nowadays is her insistence on sameness. She absolutely refuses to go to the bathroom and screams for a quarter of an hour every morning before she finally accepts... Then she refuses to leave the bathroom and screams for another quarter of an hour. This pattern is followed every day without fail and intrudes on almost all activities of daily life.
What happened to her? She suffered from herpes simplex encephalitis, a viral infection of the brain. X-rays at the age of 22 showed serious damage to the temporal lobes of the brain, extending to parts of the parietal lobes. (No pictures were provided, however.)

Can her case really be described as a "typical autistic syndrome"? Certainly, there are striking similarities, from the obsessive routines, to the echolalia (repeating what other people say), to the avoidance of eye contact, all classic symptoms of severe autism.

Of course it's always possible that the case report was written to accentuate these similarities, in order to make a nice publication. There have been a handful of other similar cases, though the same caveats apply. Still, if we do accept that these patients are indeed autistic, the implications for understanding the neurobiology of "normal" autism are obvious.

Link: "The Man With Half A Brain" who developed a rather different pattern of symptoms after herpes encephalitis.


ResearchBlogging.orgGillberg, C. (1986). Brief report: Onset at age 14 of a typical autistic syndrome. A case report of a girl with herpes simplex encephalitis Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 16 (3), 369-375 DOI: 10.1007/BF01531665