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Developmental regression
- ... they experience a gradual loss of these skills (developmental regression) within a few months. As the condition gets ... voluntary hand movements or unsupported sitting, before experiencing developmental regression, and they may survive longer into childhood than ...
- ... development but begin to lose previously acquired skills (developmental regression) and have a gradual loss in thinking ability ( ... epilepsy with encephalopathy. Because some affected children experience developmental regression after the onset of seizures, it has been ...
- ... individuals rapidly lose skills they have acquired. This developmental regression often occurs between the ages of 1 and ... or intellectual disability, but they do not experience developmental regression. Some affected females have additional features of this ...
- ... and begin losing skills they had already acquired (developmental regression). Infants with this form can have seizures. Medical ... and sterile pyrexias. Over time, affected individuals show developmental delays and regression. They may also have spasticity and hypotonia, and ...
- ... be classified as CSWS. ACECTS features seizures and developmental regression that can affect movement, language, and attention. Children ...
- ... to speak. Eventually they lose previously acquired skills (developmental regression). In some cases, signs and symptoms of infantile ...
- ... around adolescence, and these skills are slowly lost (developmental regression). As the condition worsens, nystagmus usually goes away ...
- ... and some affected children lose already-acquired skills (developmental regression). Many people with Dravet syndrome have difficulty coordinating ...
- ... can lead to falls, loss of developmental milestones (developmental regression), and in a small minority of cases, sudden ...
- ... and begin to lose skills they have acquired (developmental regression), such as sitting, rolling over, and babbling. Most ...