Feb 8, 2007

Autism Hope: Rett Syndrome May Be Curable

Scottish Study, Using Mice, Shows Rett Syndrome, A Devastating Form Of Autism, May Be Curable

  • Play CBS Video Video Study: Higher Autism Rates

    A comprehensive new study took a snapshot of school-age kids and determined that many more children are autistic that had previously been thought. Dr. Jon LaPook reports.

  • Video Autism Legislation

    Marguerite Colston, Communications Director for the Autism Society of America, discusses the new autism bill signed by President Bush that will increase autism funding.

  • Video Early Treatment For Autism

    Only On The Web: Vincent Strully, executive director of the New England Center for Children, talks with Sharyn Alfonsi about the need to treat autism at an early age.

  • Photo

     (AP)

  • Interactive Breaking The Silence

    Find out more about autism, and where to get help for someone who may have this neurological disorder.

(WebMD)  From her wheelchair, 10-year-old Chelsea Coenraad's alert, expressive eyes speak volumes to her mother. It is the only way she can speak.

At 15 months, Rett syndrome robbed Chelsea of the only word she ever learned to say: "duck," for the favorite toy she soon became unable to play with.

She cried, inconsolably, for a very, very, long time. When her parents tried to hold her, she bit them and wriggled away. She'd already become unable to sit up or stand by herself. Soon she no longer responded to her name.

"Little things she did, like play patty-cake or wave bye-bye, she could not do anymore," Chelsea's mother, Monica Coenraads, tells WebMD. "She was only happy in her crib, with the lights off, playing obsessively with this little silk blanket."

Now there's new hope for Chelsea and other people with Rett syndrome — including more than 20,000 Americans. That hope may also extend to some other people with autism, and to some cases of learning disability, retardation, and perhaps even schizophrenia.

The mutant MECP2 gene that causes Rett syndrome does not cause permanent brain damage, new mouse studies show. When MECP2 gene function is restored, mice crippled by Rett-like symptoms start running around just like normal mice.

The hope: Rett syndrome may be reversible in humans.

The studies come from the lab of Adrian Bird, Ph.D., a professor at Scotland's University of Edinburgh and chairman of the scientific board of the Rett Syndrome Research Foundation. Bird in 1990 discovered the MECP2 gene.

"This changes the mindset. It replaces pessimism by optimism," Bird tells WebMD. "It does not suggest an actual treatment. But now, with a spring in their step, people can move forward and look for a treatment."

"The findings are extraordinary, and are of relevance not only to Rett syndrome but to a much broader class of disorders, including autism and schizophrenia," Baylor University researcher Huda Zoghbi, MD, said in a news release. It was Zoghbi who in 1999 found that MECP2 mutations cause Rett syndrome.

Bird and colleagues report their findings in the Feb. 8 issue of the online journal Sciencexpress.

Rett syndrome is part of the spectrum of autism disorders.

Symptoms usually appear at age 6 to 18 months. As in other autism spectrum disorders, children withdraw socially. Like Chelsea, they often cry for months on end. Unlike kids with other autism disorders, Rett-syndrome children often begin constant, compulsive hand wringing. They lose any language and motor skills they may have learned.

Eventually, their hands become useless, as the ability to organize voluntary movements goes away. Chewing, swallowing, and even breathing can be a problem. Tremors are common; some kids have seizures.

The gene responsible for Rett syndrome appears only on the X chromosome. Boys have only one X chromosome. If they inherit a mutant MECP2 gene, they usually die as infants.

But girls have two X chromosomes. If they inherit the mutant gene from one parent, they almost always get a good copy of the gene from the other parent. X-gene expression is random in females, so girls with a single copy of the gene still have some MECP2 gene function. That rescues girls from death. "But the price of the rescue is Rett syndrome," Bird says.

Today, Chelsea is confined to a wheelchair. She must be tube-fed. She cannot use her hands or make any purposeful movements, and she suffers daily seizures.

Continued



By Daniel DeNoon
Reviewed by Louise Chang
Copyright 2007, WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.

Video and Galleries from Health: WebMD

  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented
Latest News
Featured Blogs