Selective mutism
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Kiran Singh, M.D. [2]
Overview
Selective mutism is a social anxiety disorder in which a person who is normally capable of speech is unable to speak in given situations.
Causes
No single cause has been established, but there is some evidence that there is a hereditary component.
Differential Diagnosis
- Autism spectrum disorder
- Communication disorders
- Language disorder
- Speech sound disorder (previously phonological disorder)
- Childhood-onset fluency disorder (stuttering)
- Pragmatic (social) communication disorder
- Intellectual disability
- Neuro-developmental disorders
- Psychotic disorders
- Schizophrenia
- Social anxiety disorder (social phobia)[1]
Epidemiology and Demographics
Prevalence
The prevalence of selective mutism is 30-1,000 per 100,000 (0.03%-1%) of the overall population.[1]
Risk Factors
- Behavioral inhibition
- Genetic predisposition
- Negative affectivity (neuroticism)
- Parental history of shyness
- Social anxiety
- Social isolation[1]
Natural History, Complications, and Prognosis
Children (and adults) with the disorder are fully capable of speech and understanding language, but fail to speak in certain social situations when it is expected of them. They function normally in other areas of behavior and learning, though appear severely withdrawn and some are unable to participate in group activities due to their extreme anxiety. It is like an extreme form of shyness, but the intensity and duration distinguish it. As an example, a child may be completely silent at school, for years at a time, but speak quite freely or even excessively at home.
Diagnostic Criteria
DSM-V Diagnostic Criteria for Selective Mutism[1]
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spectrum disorder, schizophrenia, or another psychotic disorder. |
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Symptoms
Selective mutism is usually characterised by the following:
- Consistent failure to speak in specific social situations (in which there is an expectation for speaking, e.g., at school) despite speaking in other situations.
- Interference with educational or occupational achievement or with social communication.
- Disturbance lasting at least 1 month (not limited to the first month of school).
- Failure to speak not due to a lack of knowledge of, or comfort with, the spoken language required by the social situation.
- Lack of better cause explained by a Communication Disorder (e.g. stuttering) and disturbance lasting longer than a Pervasive Developmental Disorder, Schizophrenia, or other Psychotic Disorder.
Typical sufferers have some of the following traits when anxious, some of which are often perceived as rudeness:
- Find it difficult to maintain eye contact.
- Often don't smile and have blank expressions.
- Move stiffly and awkwardly.
- Find situations where talking is normally expected particularly hard to handle (answering school registers, saying hello, goodbye, thank you, etc.).
- Tend to worry about things more than others.
- Can be very sensitive to noise and crowds.
- Find it difficult to talk about themselves or express their feelings.
Treatment
Contrary to popular belief, people suffering from selective mutism don't necessarily improve with age, or just grow out of it. Consequently, treatment at an early age is important. If not addressed, selective mutism tends to be self-reinforcing; those around such a person may eventually expect him or her not to speak, and stop attempting to initiate verbal contact, making the prospect of talking seem even more difficult or foreign. Sometimes in this situation, a change of environment (such as changing schools) to a place where the condition is not proven make the difference, but in some cases; with psychological help the sufferer's condition can improve.
Occasionally, treatment in teenage years becomes more difficult, though not necessarily.
Forceful attempts to make the child talk are not productive, usually resulting in higher anxiety levels and so reinforcing the condition. The behaviour is often viewed externally as willful, or controlling, as the child usually shuts down all communication and body language in such situations, which is perceived as rudeness.
The exact treatment depends a lot on the subject, their age and other factors. Typically, stimulus fading is used with younger children.
Some in the psychiatric community believe that anxiety medication may be effective in extremely low dosages and that higher doses may just make the problem worse. Others in the field believe that the side-effects of psychiatric medications- in any dose and on any child- are so dangerous as to negate any temporary benefit, preferring behavioral and psychological interventions.
Stimulus Fading
In this technique the sufferer is brought into a controlled environment with someone who they are at ease with and can communicate. Gradually another person is introduced into the situation involving a number of small steps.
These steps are often done in separate stages in which case it is called the sliding-in technique, where a new person is slid into the talking group. This can take a relatively long time for the first one or two faded in people.
Desensitization
The subject is allowed to communicate via non-direct means to prepare them mentally for the next step. This might include email, phone, taped recordings, webchat, until they are in a position to try more direct communication.
Medical Therapy
Some practitioners believe that there is evidence indicating that antidepressants such as fluoxetine (prozac) may be effective in treating children with selective mutism. Though many in the medical community believe that psychiatric medications decrease the anxiety levels enough to allow communication to take place in cases of selective mutism, other practitioners and activists (see articles on Peter Breggin and David Healy (psychiatrist)) stringently decry any use of psychiatric medications on children and note the lack of medical proof of genetic links to behavioral disorders. The denunciation of psychotropic intervention on children with behavioral anxiety disorders has intensified particularly since lawsuits against several drug companies—current to 2005—have exposed previously unseen internal research documents linking fluoxetine and other SSRI antidepressants with increased risk of suicide, psychosis and—ironically enough—damage to areas of the brain which could affect language production and normal social development.