Fragile X Syndrome Flashcards
Information
1/4000 males
1/6000 females - less severe as have protective (second) X chromosome
impaired cognitive ability
Caused by expansion of the CGG repeat at beginning of FMR-1 (fragile X mental retardation - 1) gene on X chromosome
most common form of intellectual disability
typically diagnosed at 3-4 years
Brain differences
Hoeft et al (2010) - grey and white matter brain differences
- 1-3 yo boys
- enlarged GMV (grey matter volume) caudate (learning), thalamus (sensory processing) and fusiform gyri (recognition)
- reduced GMV in cerebellar vermis (movement)
- enlarged WMV in striatal-prefrontal regions (adolescent development)
- early (possibly prenatal) genetically mediated alterations in neurodevelopment
Hoeft et al (2010)
MRI scans looking at differences between brain areas (grey and white matter comparison)
What causes FXS
expansion of the CGG repeat at beginning of FMR-1 gene on chromosome X
- Individuals are classified as having a full mutation (200–2,000 repeats), pre mutation (50–200 repeats), or normal (5 –50 repeats) allele based on the size of the CGG expanded region
Physical features
long and narrow face
prominent jaw and ears
flat feat
Cognitive and behavioural profile (M)
Males
- IQ = 40
- communication impairment (language and social)
- hyperactivity
- inattention
- impulsiveness
- hyper arousal
- delayed motor development
Cognitive and behavioural profile (F)
Females
- IQ = 70
- social difficulties (emotional, anxiety and depression)
Strengths of individuals
- imitation
- good visual learners
- personable (sense of humour and sensitive)
First signs
- sensory and motor atypicality (9-12m)
- decreased object play
- leg stereopsis
- atypical posture
- prolonged visual attention
- missing milestones can alert parents to seek medical attention (most disorders)
common features
> short attention span
distractibility
impulsiveness
restlessness
- overacting sensory problems
- social difficulties (anxious)
- emotional difficulties
- communication difficulties
> = ADHD - = Autistic
comorbidity
- with ADHD and Autism
- dual diagnosis of autism (50-90% symptoms, 25-80% diagnosed)
- poor eye contact
- hand flapping
- ADHD symptoms prevalence (54-59%)
- epilepsy also common
dual diagnosis of autism
symptoms = 50-90% diagnosed = 25-80%
comorbidity with ADHD
symptom prevalence = 54-59%
adaptive behaviour
- everyday skills or tasks that a person can do
- measured via the Vineland adaptive behaviour scale (standardised)
- assesses real life skill and independence
- semi structured parent interview to identify whether there are areas to help develop within a child
(communication, daily living, socialisation, motor skills) - need to consider child developmental trajectory (Annette Karmiloff-Smith)
- positive environmental influences may act as protective factors (Glaser et al., 2003)
Glaser et al., 2003 - POPE
suggested that parental expectation, parental skill, emotional climate and organisation of the home are all influential factors
- IQ was the strongest predictor of outcomes