Sensory Processing Difficulties in Autism, ADHD & Learning Disabilities: Why Everyday Sounds, Clothes or Lights Can Feel Overwhelming

Some children cover their ears when the pressure cooker whistles.
Some refuse haircuts, certain clothes, or toothpaste.
Some chew their shirt collars, rock back and forth, or get angry when touched.
Others don’t feel pain when they fall, or crave loud music and spinning movements.

These behaviours are often misunderstood as “stubbornness”, “attention-seeking” or “naughtiness”.
Sometimes even diagnosed wrongly as OCD, anxiety, or oppositional behaviour.

But in many children with Autism, ADHD, Dyslexia, Developmental Delay or Learning Disabilities, these are signs of Sensory Processing Difficulties (SPD).

🧠 What Is Sensory Processing?

Our brain constantly receives information from the five senses (sight, sound, touch, taste, smell) and two hidden senses:

Sense What it does
Vestibular Balance, movement, body position
Proprioception Body awareness (knowing where your hands/legs are without looking)

Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD) occurs when the brain has trouble receiving, filtering, or responding to sensory information correctly.

⚠️ Types of Sensory Issues

🔹 1. Hypersensitivity (Over-Responsive Child)

Everything feels “too much”

Sensory System Signs
Sound Covers ears, hates loud noise, cries in crowded places
Touch Avoids haircuts, washing face, certain clothes (tags, socks)
Light Squints, avoids sunlight, hates bright classroom lights
Taste/Smell Extremely selective eater, vomits with strong smells
Movement Scared of swings, escalators, car rides

🔹 2. Hyposensitivity (Under-Responsive Child)

They seek more stimulation and feel less

Sensory System Signs
Sound Doesn’t respond to name, loves loud volumes
Touch Falls/injured but doesn’t cry, bumps into people
Movement Keeps jumping, spinning, climbing furniture
Proprioception Crashes into walls, chews shirts/pencils, hugs too tightly

🔹 3. Sensory Seeking (Craving Sensation)

  • Always touching things

  • Chewing shirt collars/pencils

  • Smelling objects repeatedly

  • Jumping on sofas, spinning in circles

👦 Which Children Have Sensory Issues?

Common in:
✔ Autism (up to 90%)
✔ ADHD (40–60%)
✔ Dyslexia / Dysgraphia (affects handwriting, pencil grip)
✔ Developmental Coordination Disorder
✔ Speech delay due to oral motor sensitivity
✔ Even some “normal” kids with behavioural issues

📚 How Sensory Issues Affect Learning in School

Sensory Problem Classroom Impact
Noise sensitivity Covers ears, refuses assembly/school functions
Touch sensitivity Hates school uniform tags, socks, shoes
Visual overload Complains of headaches, avoids reading
Pencil grip difficulty Poor handwriting → labelled lazy
Movement seeking Keeps getting up, walking around, seen as “naughty”
Smell/taste issues Avoids lunch, throws tantrums at eating time

🏠 What Parents Can Do at Home

General Tips

✔ Respect, don’t shame: “Stop overreacting!” → damages trust
✔ Prepare child before sensory triggers: “There will be loud music in temple today. Want to carry headphones?”
✔ Use chewable jewellery, silicone pencil toppers for chewing
✔ Use seamless, tagless clothes, soft cotton, no synthetic uniforms
✔ Sound-cancelling headphones during loud festivals, weddings, crackers

Sensory Diet (OT-Based Home Routine)

This is a daily set of sensory activities given by an Occupational Therapist to regulate the child’s brain.

Examples:

  • Jumping on trampoline/bed

  • Rolling in blanket/bedsheet (sandwich game)

  • Pushing heavy objects – filled laundry basket, shopping cart

  • Clapping games, bean bag throwing

  • Brushing therapy (Wilbarger Protocol) – only under OT guidance

🧑‍⚕️ When to Consult a Professional?

Sign Whom to Consult
Avoids touch, loud sounds, haircuts Occupational Therapist (Sensory Integration Therapy)
Co-existing autism/speech delay Child Psychiatrist / Developmental Pediatrician
Writing/posture issues Occupational Therapist
Behaviour concerns (anger, crying) Child Psychologist / CBT Therapist

Early therapy helps brain rewire better — neuroplasticity is strongest before age 7.

💡 Key Takeaways for Parents & Teachers

✔ Sensory issues are real, neurological, not attention-seeking
✔ Child is not “stubborn” — their brain is overwhelmed or under-responsive
✔ Sensory-friendly classrooms + therapy = major improvement
✔ Never force, punish or shame — accommodate and train gradually

👨‍⚕️ About the Author

Dr. Srinivas Rajkumar T
MD (AIIMS), DNB Psychiatry
Consultant – Child, Adolescent & Family Psychiatry
Mind & Memory Clinic – Apollo Clinic
(Opp. Phoenix MarketCity), Velachery, Chennai
📞 +91-8595155808 | 🌐 www.srinivasaiims.com

Specialist in Autism, ADHD, Learning Disabilities, Sensory Processing Issues & Early Intervention.
Offers Sensory Profile Assessments, Parent Training & Occupational Therapy referrals.

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