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Cognitive Disabilities Mental Retardation • APA Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV (DSM-IV): – Sub-average intellectual functioning – Onset before 18 years – Limited adaptive (life) skills Four Levels of Mental Retardation 1. Mild: IQ 50-70 -about 85% of all MR individuals -most can hold a job and live independently -familial (runs in families) 2. Moderate: IQ 35-50 -about 8% of all MR individuals -most institutionalized or group homes -good self-care and simple language skills -not familial Four Levels of Mental Retardation 3. Severe: IQ 20-35 -about 4% of all MR individuals -require considerable supervision -some self-care and language comprehension skills, limited speech -not familial 4. Profound: IQ < 20 -about 2-3% of all MR individuals -most institutionalized -limited if any language comprehension, usually no speech -not familial Two Types of Mental Retardation 1. Cultural/Familial: Attributable to the combined effects of the multiple genetic and environmental factors that contribute to variation in IQ throughout its normal range 2. Organic: Attributable to a major traumatic event that causes irreversible damage to the developing CNS IQ Distribution Evidence for Two Types of MR Evidence for Familiality of Mild MR Reed & Reed (1965): -studied 80,000 relatives of 289 individuals with MR -20% of children with one mildly MR parent were mildly MR -about 50% of children with two mildly MR parents were mildly MR Nichols (1984): -studied IQs of 15 MZ and 23 DZ pairs in which at least 1 twin had mild MR -concordance for MR: MZ = 75%, DZ = 46% Other twin studies: -low IQ is at least as heritable as is IQ in the normal range Factors Contributing to Organic MR (% are very approximate) Specific Environmental Factors:10-30% -teratogens (alcohol) -peri- and post-natal trauma (Asphyxia) -fetal infections (Rubella) -head injuries Specific Genetic Factors: 50-60% -chromosomal disorders (Down Syndrome) -genetic disorders (PKU, RETT, Lesch-Nyhan) Down Syndrome • single most important cause of MR: occurs in about 1/1000 births • average IQ: 55 but a wide range exists -top 10% have IQ’s in the lower end of normal range • many of those who reach age 45 will have some form of dementia • caused by a trisomy of chromosome 21 (i.e. 3 rather than 2 copies of chromosome 21 are inherited) • occurs more often in offspring of older mothers, presumably due to activation of eggs that have been dormant for decades Normal Set of Chromosomes (Female) Chromosomes of a Male with Trisomy 21 Phenylketonuria (PKU) • occurs in about 1/10,000 births • if untreated, IQ’s often < 50 though some near normal • PKU is a single-gene recessive disorder • easily detected (at birth) and treated by a diet low in phenylalanine (found in red meats and other foods) • even with treatment, PKU individuals are somewhat below average IQ • excellent example of something which is entirely ‘genetic’ being largely treatable by ‘environmental’ intervention Rett Syndrome • second most common cause of MR in females (after Down Syndrome) • occurs in about 1/10,000 females • shows few effects in infancy • by age 5, most affected girls cannot stand, talk, or use hands and will show autistic-like behavior • due to these symptoms, an accurate assessment of intelligence is essentially impossible Other Genetic or Chromosomal Disorders Contributing to MR More than 100 genetic disorders include MR among their symptoms: Fragile X Syndrome Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Neurofibromatosis Type 1 Angelman Syndrome Williams Syndrome XXY Male Syndrome XXX Female Syndrome XYY Male Syndrome XO Female (Turner’s) Fragile X Syndrome • second most common cause of MR after Down Syndrome • twice as common in males (1/1250) than females (1/2500) • most fragile X males have moderate MR, many only mild, some normal IQ • only about half of fragile X females are affected because one of the two X chromosomes inactivates • typically 6 to 54 CGG triplet repeats on the X chromosome • fragile X chromosome may have > 200 such repeats - ‘fragile’: this many repeats literally makes it break easily. • neurobiological research may one day counteract its effects, which molecular genetic research is beginning to understand Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy • an X-linked recessive disorder found in 1/3500 males • average IQ of affected males is 85 • verbal abilities typically more impaired than nonverbal • neuromuscular disorder that usually leads to death by 20 years • it is not known how the DMD gene affects IQ Sex Chromosome Abnormalities • an X-linked recessive disorder found in 1/3500 males • average IQ of affected males is 85 • verbal abilities typically more impaired than nonverbal • neuromuscular disorder that usually leads to death by 20 years • it is not known how the DMD gene affects IQ Sex Chromosome Abnormalities XXY Male Syndrome -occurs in about 1/750 male births -somewhat lower than average IQ, poor academic -achievement, language problems XXX Female Syndrome -occurs in about 1/1000 female births -average IQ=85 -speech therapy often required Sex Chromosome Abnormalities XYY Male Syndrome -occurs in about 1/1000 male births -often require speech therapy, academic problems, higher incidence of juvenile delinquency XO Female (Turner’s) Syndrome -occurs in about 1/2500 female births (but 99% miscarry) -surviving females have just one X chromosome -short stature, abnormal sexual development, often infertile -normal verbal IQ but performance IQ is below average Reading Disability (Dyslexia) -the primary disability in about 80% of children with a diagnosed learning disorder -Dyslexic children read slowly and with poor comprehension -familial and likely heritable: -among 250 twin pairs in which at least one was dyslexic, MZ concordance = 66%, DZ = 36% -DF extremes analysis (group heritability) -the first QTL for any human disorder was reported and replicated for reading disability Group Heritability • An estimate of the extent to which the difference between average and extreme scoring individuals is attributable to genetic and/or environmental factors • Example: Reading disabilities GROUP HERITABILITY Reading Disabilities GROUP HERITABILITY Reading Disabilities group h2 = 0 x RD x MZ & DZ GROUP HERITABILITY Reading Disabilities group h2 = 1.0 x RD & MZ x DZ GROUP HERITABILITY Reading Disabilities Defries & Fulker (1985) group h2 = .28 x RD -2.8 x MZ -2.0 x DZ -.1.6 Estimating Group Heritability 1. Compute ratio of reading scores: MZ = 2.0/2.8 = .71 DZ = 1.6/2.8 = .57 2. Group Heritability = 2(MZ - DZ) = 2(.71 - .57) = .28 3. Therefore, 28% of the difference between RD and general population is attributable to genetic factors .71 - .28 = 43% of the difference is attributable to shared environmental factors the remaining 29% is attributable to nonshared environmental factors Comparing Heritability and Group Heritability (individual) h2 for reading ability = .50 group h2 for reading disability = .28 Since these differ, this indicates that the genetic etiology of reading disabilities is different from that of the normal distribution of reading scores