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Evaluation of mental retardation: Recommendations of a consensus conference
Authors:Cynthia J. Curry  Roger E. Stevenson  David Aughton  Janice Byrne  John C. Carey  Suzanne Cassidy  Christopher Cunniff  John M. Graham  Marilyn C. Jones  Michael M. Kaback  John Moeschler  G. Bradley Schaefer  Stuart Schwartz  Jack Tarleton  John Opitz
Abstract:A Consensus Conference utilizing available literature and expert opinion sponsored by the American College of Medical Genetics in October 1995 evaluated the rational approach to the individual with mental retardation. Although no uniform protocol replaces individual clinician judgement, the consensus recommendations were as follows: 1. The individual with mental retardation, the family, and medical care providers benefit from a focused clinical and laboratory evaluation aimed at establishing causation and in providing counseling, prognosis, recurrence risks, and guidelines for management. 2. Essential elements of the evaluation include a three-generation pedigree: pre-, peri-, and post-natal history, complete physical examination focused on the presence of minor anomalies, neurologic examination, and assessment of the behavioral phenotype. 3. Selective laboratory testing should, in most patients, include a banded karyotype. Fragile X testing should be strongly considered in both males and females with unexplained mental retardation, especially in the presence of a positive family history, a consistent physical and behavioral phenotype and absence of major structural abnormalities. Metabolic testing should be initialed in the presence of suggestive clinical and physical findings. Neuroimaging should be considered in patients without a known diagnosis especially in the presence of neurologic symptoms, cranial contour abnormalities, microcephaly, or macrocephaly. In most situations MRI is the testing modality of choice. 4. Sequential evaluation of the patient, occasionally over several years, is often necessary for diagnosis, allowing for delineation of the physical and behavioral phenotype, a logical approach to ancillary testing and appropriate prognostic and reproductive counseling. Am. J. Med. Genet. 72:468–477, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords:mental retardation  chromosome testing  fragile X  metabolic testing  neuroimaging
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