Table 1.
Reference | Sample | Methods | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Hatta et al. (2019) [27] |
HC: N = 26 (F = 12; M = 14; mean age: 12.7 ± 1.9); SSD: N = 28 (F = 15; M = 13; mean age: 13.4 ± 2.0) | AQ—children’s version | 42.9% of individuals with SSD had an AQ score above the average Higher scores in the AQ “Attention Switching” domain were associated with reduced health-related quality of life |
Nisticò et al. (2022) [31] |
NA: N = 45 (F = 17; M = 28; mean age: 35.36 ± 11.85); ASD: N = 30 (F = 14; M = 16; mean age: 39.67 ± 12.18) FNDs: N = 21 (F = 17; M = 4; mean age: 42.9 ± 13.02) | RAADS-R; AQ; FNS; SPQ-SF35. | 86.7% of individuals with ASD reported at least one FNS vs. 35.6% of NAs Individuals with FNDs did not exhibit more autistic traits than NAs |
Cole et al. (2023) [36] |
FND: N = 91 (F = 69; M = 22; mean age: 43.42 ± 13.39) | AQ-10; PHQ-15; PHQ9; ASRS; TASS-20; GAD-7; WSAS. | 36 subjects scored above the AQ-10 threshold 36 subjects screened positive for alexithymia AQ-10 had a direct effect on somatic symptoms Significant association between autistic traits and PHQ9 depression scores mediated by alexithymia score |
Miyawaki et al. (2016) [37] |
10-year-old girl with undiagnosed ASD and PNES | Pervasive Developmental Disorders Autism Society Japan Rating Scale; Children’s Global Assessment Scale | PNES as an outcome of psychological distress |
McWilliams et al. (2019) [38] |
ASD: N = 10 (F = 6; M = 4) HC: N = 49 (F = 31; M = 18) |
Video EEG | 10 subjects with non-epileptic seizures had clinically diagnosed ASD, and 5 had undiagnosed ASD |