Our dietary diversity has changed day by day in industrial age. A low dietary diversity may alter gut microbiota diversity and functional capacity. Wrong messages sourced from gut microbiota were speculated to have a bad influence on autism spectrum disorder (ASD) severity. A new nutritional model aiming to increase microbiota diversity in children with ASD can improve social and communicative behaviors in these children. The investigators compared 220 ASD patients who regularly followed a specific diet program for at least 12 months with randomly selected 100 children with ASD who did not have diet compliance in terms of nutritional status and regular behavioral assessments with special scales (ATEC, ABC, QoLA-P scales). The investigators arised a question that the Microbiota-Diversity Enhancing Diet on Children with ASD (MIND-DASE) which is a specific dietary intervention may have benefits on the neurodevelopmental outcomes of children with ASD.
Age range
2 Years – 18 Years
Sex
ALL
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Changes in ATEC scores in diet (study) and non-diet (control) ASD participants from baseline to 1 year period.
Timeframe: From enrollment to the end of 12-month time period
Changes in ABC scores in diet (study) and non-diet (control) ASD participants from baseline to 1 year period.
Timeframe: From enrollment to the end of 12-month time period
Changes QoLA-P scores in diet (study) and non-diet (control) ASD participants from baseline to 1 year period.
Timeframe: From enrollment to the end of 12-month time period