Williams Syndrome Flashcards
diagnosis
- common facial features
- cardiovascular disorders
- kidney, bladder and gastrointestinal difficulties
- hypersensitive hearing
- developmental delay
- poor motor skills
A diagnosis of WS is only given following a genetic test so diagnosis is made on this basis.
Clinicians may suspect WS based on facial features and parental report of cognitive and behavioural characteristics but diagnosis is made on a genetic basis alone.
common facial features
broad brow flat bridge of nose short upturned nose wide mouth large lips
genetic diagnosis
hemizygous (1 of pair) deletion of 26-28 genes on chromosome 7q11.23
- genetic diagnosis comes from fluorescence in situ hybridisation test (FISH)
cognitive profile
- mild to moderate learning difficulties
- mean full scale IQ (FSIQ) is 50-60 (range from 40-100)
- verbal IQ (VIQ) = 63 (relative strength)
- relative strength in face processing
- poor visuospatial processing (PIQ = 55)
- struggle with number, special relations and abstract reasoning
- social, friendly and endearing
behavioural profile
- strength in muscle ability
- social, friendly and endearing
- empathetic
- affectionate
- little restraint towards unfamiliar people (stranger danger)
- strange fears (96%)
differences in the brain
Reiss et al (2004)
- majority of studies use MRI (structural scans)
- total brain and occipital grey matter volumes preserved compared to white matter (however, other studies find grey matter also reduced)
- limbic system tends to be preserved, amygdala tends to have increased in size (link to hyper-sociability)
- lower part of prefrontal area tends to be increased (cognition and behaviour)
- occipital grey matter reduced (visuospatial processing)
- amygdala and limbic system increased (alters feelings of risk/fear/inhibition of emotion)
research methods to understand WS
- language (Brock, 2007)
- visuospatial abilities (Farran and Jarrold, 2003)
- attention (Cornish and Karmiloff-Smith, 2007)
- executive function (Rhodes et al, 2010)
Brock (2007)
naming picture cards in experimental studies
[relative strengths] \+ speech production (word fluency) \+ phonological short term memory \+ receptive vocabulary (understanding) \+grammatical abilities
[relative weaknesses]
- pragmatics (context contributed to meaning)
- reciprocal conversation
Farran and Jarrold (2003)
a) pattern construction [DAS]
b) block design [WASI]
- poor ability in visuospatial abilities (perhaps related to motor planning deficit)
- tests have been standardised (uses many times with typically developing children) to act as a comparison
Cornish & Karmiloff-Smith (2007)
- compares performance between FXS, WS and control (MA matched)
- used anti-saccade task
- P’s required to orient away from suddenly appearing peripheral flash and direct eye movement to contralateral location
- WS = struggle to disengage to rewarding stimulus location
- used orienting task
- automatic orienting of attention
- fixation cross, flash to one side, rewarding target appears on same/opposite side
- how quick can p’s direct their attention
- WS = high interference effect from invalid cues (leading to distractibility in older ages)
Rhodes et al (2010)
- difficulties with planning, wm and inhibition
- tower of Hanoi - move entire stack of discs to another rod (planning)
comorbidity
- ADHD = 65% (hyperactivity)
- specific phobia = 54% (fear and anxiety)
- behaviours persist into adulthood
- generalised anxiety with age