Syndrome, fragile X
The most common heritable form of mental retardation, occurring in about one in two thousand males and a smaller percentage of females.
Characteristics of Fragile X syndrome in boys include prominent or long ears, a long face, delayed speech, large testes (macroorchidism), hyperactivity, tactile defensiveness, gross motor delays, and autistic-like behaviors.
Much less is known about girls with Fragile X syndrome.
Only about half of all females who carry the genetic mutation have symptoms themselves.
Of those, half are of normal intelligence, and only one-fourth have an IQ under seventy.
Few Fragile X girls have autistic symptoms, although they tend to be shy and quiet.
Fragile X syndrome is due to a dynamic mutation (a trinucleotide repeat) at an inherited fragile site on the X chromosome, and so is an X-linked disorder.
Because the mutation is dynamic, it can change in length and hence in severity from generation to generation, from person to person, and even within a given person.
Fragile X syndrome is diagnosed with a genetic test.
Also known as FRAXA (as is the Fragile X chromosome itself) and Martin-Bell syndrome