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Fast Fact
Children who suck their thumbs are able to begin at an early age to meet their own need for sucking. These children fall asleep more easily, are able to put themselves back to sleep at night more easily, and sleep through the night much earlier than infants who do not suck their thumbs.
A study by Dr. T. Berry Brazelton indicates that as many as 94% have finished with sucking their thumbs by their first birthdays.
According to the American Dental Association, thumb sucking does not cause permanent problems with the teeth or jaw line, unless it is continued beyond four to five years of age.
Many studies have looked at the number of children who continue to suck their thumbs at this time. As it turns out, somewhere between 85% to 99% of children have finished thumb sucking spontaneously before this period (the numbers vary depending on the study).
When investigators looked at this group of late thumb-suckers for common traits, they found that they had one thing in common that distinguished them from other children -- a prolonged history of a strong battle with thumb sucking at an earlier age. It is striking that many well-meaning parents have actually encouraged this behavior by trying to forcibly take the thumb out of their children's mouths.
Martin-Bell syndrome, Marker X syndrome, Cluttering
Introduction to fragile X syndrome:
Fragile X syndrome is the most common cause of mental retardation in boys.
What is fragile X syndrome?
Fragile X syndrome is a condition caused by a fragile area on the X chromosome. This section of the chromosome contains ‘repeats’ in the genetic code. Higher numbers of repeats is associated with more severe forms of the disease.
Who gets fragile X syndrome?
The number of repeats in a fragile X chromosome tends to remain constant when transmitted by a father but to increase each time it is transmitted by a mother. Those with 200 to 2000 repeats (or even more) have the symptoms of full-blown fragile X syndrome. Girls with fragile X syndrome have varying degrees of symptoms.
What are the symptoms of fragile X syndrome?
The classic symptoms are mental retardation, large size, large testicles, and a long face with a prominent jaw and large ears. Often the eyes are pale blue.
Torticollis and cleft palate are more common in those with Fragile X.
These children also tend to be hyperactive and sometimes have some of the stereotypical movements associated with autism.
Cluttering is the name of their characteristic speech pattern. Like stuttering, cluttering is a speech disorder, but cluttering involves pauses in normal speech that are too short, too long, and in the wrong places. These may come from talking in fast spurts, or from not knowing what one wants to say. Corrections, revisions, and interjections are common. (People who stutter know what they want to say but have difficulty getting the words out.)
Is fragile X syndrome contagious?
No
How long does fragile X syndrome last?
This is a lifelong condition.
How is fragile X syndrome diagnosed?
Fragile X is diagnosed with specific chromosome testing.
How is fragile X syndrome treated?
There is no cure for fragile X syndrome. Therapy is aimed at helping people with fragile X reach their full potential.
How can fragile X syndrome be prevented?
Once a baby is conceived with fragile X, nothing can change that. Timing of childbearing may make some difference in inheritance. We do know that women who are carriers are more likely to have had older fathers.
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