Mental Retardation among Children Born with Birth Defects

Mental retardation (MR) is a major health problem affecting 3% of the population. It results from the interaction of many genes and non-genetic factors. However, in up to 60% of patients the aetiology remains unclear. The aim of the study is to examine the association of birth defects and MR, taking...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nargues M. Hassanein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexandria University 2008-09-01
Series:Journal of High Institute of Public Health
Subjects:
_version_ 1818360563630080000
author Nargues M. Hassanein
author_facet Nargues M. Hassanein
author_sort Nargues M. Hassanein
collection DOAJ
description Mental retardation (MR) is a major health problem affecting 3% of the population. It results from the interaction of many genes and non-genetic factors. However, in up to 60% of patients the aetiology remains unclear. The aim of the study is to examine the association of birth defects and MR, taking into consideration the type of birth defect, level of MR, co-occurrence of MR with other developmental disabilities, genetic and biological risk factors. A case control study was conducted on 300 children with MR from December 2006 to December 2007. They were referred to the Human Genetics Department, Medical Research Institute, University of Alexandria, for diagnosis and genetic counseling. For comparison, 506 normal control groups were randomly selected. The cases were 156 males (54%) and 135 females (46%), the difference was not statistically significant. Out of 300 studied cases, 72 children (24%) had various chromosomal aberrations, while the remaining 228 (76%) had single gene disorder. From these groups 66 children had another coexisting DDS (25 with CP, 15 had VL, 10 with autism; 10 HL and 6 had epilepsy). Mild MR (MMR) was more prevalent among all the studied cases than severe MR (SMR), there was significant association between SMR and birth defects (OR= 1.85, CI: 1.05-3.27). Birth defects occurred in 180 children (40 children with Down syndrome, 1 with sex chromosomal defect, 3 with other chromosomal anomalies, and the remaining 136 with non-chromosomal abnormalities). There was significant association between children with Down syndrome and birth defects (OR=10; CI: 1-242.25). Birth defects were present in 41 children with MR and other coexisting DDs. Also, it was found that all children with different birth defects had significant association with MR, (OR= 87.21; CI: 40.38-196.31). These MR risks tended to be the largest among infants born with heart and central nervous system defects. There was significant association between low birth weight (OR = 3.57; CI: 1.91-6.65), preterm (OR= 9.63; CI: 2.21-47.84), and parental consanguinity (OR= 4.19; CI: 2.9-6.06) and the occurrence of MR. This study high-lights the role of prenatal factors in the origin of many DDS especially MR and suggests that a sizable proportion of DDS may be caused by insults occurring early in embryologic development.
first_indexed 2024-12-13T21:02:47Z
format Article
id doaj.art-79d5ab7404df41ddb5b69d555c66ca1a
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2357-0601
2357-061X
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-13T21:02:47Z
publishDate 2008-09-01
publisher Alexandria University
record_format Article
series Journal of High Institute of Public Health
spelling doaj.art-79d5ab7404df41ddb5b69d555c66ca1a2022-12-21T23:31:33ZengAlexandria UniversityJournal of High Institute of Public Health2357-06012357-061X2008-09-0138355756710.21608/JHIPH.2008.20904Mental Retardation among Children Born with Birth DefectsNargues M. Hassanein0Department of Human Genetics, Medical Research Institute, Alexandria university, Alexandria, EgyptMental retardation (MR) is a major health problem affecting 3% of the population. It results from the interaction of many genes and non-genetic factors. However, in up to 60% of patients the aetiology remains unclear. The aim of the study is to examine the association of birth defects and MR, taking into consideration the type of birth defect, level of MR, co-occurrence of MR with other developmental disabilities, genetic and biological risk factors. A case control study was conducted on 300 children with MR from December 2006 to December 2007. They were referred to the Human Genetics Department, Medical Research Institute, University of Alexandria, for diagnosis and genetic counseling. For comparison, 506 normal control groups were randomly selected. The cases were 156 males (54%) and 135 females (46%), the difference was not statistically significant. Out of 300 studied cases, 72 children (24%) had various chromosomal aberrations, while the remaining 228 (76%) had single gene disorder. From these groups 66 children had another coexisting DDS (25 with CP, 15 had VL, 10 with autism; 10 HL and 6 had epilepsy). Mild MR (MMR) was more prevalent among all the studied cases than severe MR (SMR), there was significant association between SMR and birth defects (OR= 1.85, CI: 1.05-3.27). Birth defects occurred in 180 children (40 children with Down syndrome, 1 with sex chromosomal defect, 3 with other chromosomal anomalies, and the remaining 136 with non-chromosomal abnormalities). There was significant association between children with Down syndrome and birth defects (OR=10; CI: 1-242.25). Birth defects were present in 41 children with MR and other coexisting DDs. Also, it was found that all children with different birth defects had significant association with MR, (OR= 87.21; CI: 40.38-196.31). These MR risks tended to be the largest among infants born with heart and central nervous system defects. There was significant association between low birth weight (OR = 3.57; CI: 1.91-6.65), preterm (OR= 9.63; CI: 2.21-47.84), and parental consanguinity (OR= 4.19; CI: 2.9-6.06) and the occurrence of MR. This study high-lights the role of prenatal factors in the origin of many DDS especially MR and suggests that a sizable proportion of DDS may be caused by insults occurring early in embryologic development.mental retardationchildrenbirth defects
spellingShingle Nargues M. Hassanein
Mental Retardation among Children Born with Birth Defects
Journal of High Institute of Public Health
mental retardation
children
birth defects
title Mental Retardation among Children Born with Birth Defects
title_full Mental Retardation among Children Born with Birth Defects
title_fullStr Mental Retardation among Children Born with Birth Defects
title_full_unstemmed Mental Retardation among Children Born with Birth Defects
title_short Mental Retardation among Children Born with Birth Defects
title_sort mental retardation among children born with birth defects
topic mental retardation
children
birth defects
work_keys_str_mv AT narguesmhassanein mentalretardationamongchildrenbornwithbirthdefects