I appreciate the responses that you both have given me.
I have been looking on the internet for articles supporting removal of milk from this young man's diet. It's amazing what you find with goolge under casein gluten free diets, or milk AND autism, etc..
As far as working with the M.D.- wow if I only had that much power..lol. I have a book called Biological Treatments for Autism and PDD by Dr. William Shaw from Great Plains Laboratory. I can share that with my supervisor. Plus I did come across an interesting article called Dietary Interventions for the treatment of Autism...but it contains more than just the milk/casein issue we are discussing.
I will leave a link for that.
You asked why I decided to remove milk from my sons diet. Well my son has regressive autism..meaning he was perfectly fine, born healthy as far as I know- talked on time, walked on time, etc.. only right before 3 years old did I know that he was regressing. By three and a half my son was headbanging and biting. Over the years he has matured. Is just as intelligent as I thought and wanted him to be. But his social communication was poor. My son could talk at you..not with you. I cannot say one particular treatment has turned my son around to where he is learning, calm, less meltdowns, etc..Because being a desparate mother I tried alot at the same time. But I know that milk played a part in all the things I have to do for him. Others being..epsom salt baths, vitamin suppliment and antioxident protocol, yeast treatments.
My son had an interesting diet...he would only eat things that contained milk or wheat. His favorite and only foods at one time was pretzels, icecream, sour cream, cheese sticks. And that was it! His behavior was worse, I dont' know how to explain it. I know that off of it, he is much better. And I can see a big difference on his school report if someone in the lunch room had let him have a milk. I know the "wheat" is next on my list. Its just so expensive to accomplish because I know that I will need to substitute with specialty items.
Well that was a bit longwinded...that's what usually happens when I start talking about my kid.
Here are some articles I ran across and I will keep working up the chain of command for the young man I work with.
http://www.gnd.org/autism/autism.htm
http://trainland.tripod.com/paul.htm