Want this question answered?
The exact number is not known, but Edwards' syndrome (Trisomy 18) is estimated to occur in about 1 in 5,000 live births. It is less common than Down syndrome.
not many
Yes. There are people who have both Tourette's syndrome and Asperger's Syndrome. Depending on the severity of each, sometimes Tourette's syndrome will be diagnosed before Asperger's Syndrome. Both conditions have echolalia as a possible symptom, so if it is diagnosed as an element of Tourette's syndrome, it might not be considered as a symptom of another condition, which could delay diagnosis of Asperger's Syndrome. However, Asperger's Syndrome is diagnosed based on a number of symptoms, so a diagnosis of Tourette's syndrome would probably mask only a mild case of Asperger's Syndrome. Before Asperger's Syndrome became a recognized condition, it was diagnosed as other conditions. It is possible that one of those misdiagnoses could have been Tourette's syndrome.
2009 statistics show over 131,199 people in Mexico were diagnosed with down syndrome, or 3.73 cases per 10,000 births.
Yea sure
There are 100's and 100's of people who go through their everyday lives that probably don't even know that they have asperger's syndrome.
Typically there will be no problem with it.
People diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome show significant difficulties in social interaction, along with restricted and repetitive patterns of behaviors and interests
They are partially blind, have extra fingers and/or toes, has obesity, and has trouble with learning.
Patricia Ann Jacobs(1934-)has Triple X Syndrome. She is the first lady diagnosed Triple X. She is studying genetics now.
Asperger Syndrome is not something that people 'get', a person is born Autistic.Autism is a neurological difference so it is formed when our brains are formed within the womb during the second trimester, it is genetic in nature so dependent on our parents. Many people are not diagnosed until adulthood but this isn't the same as getting autism as an adult.
about two-thirds of all people with Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome will be diagnosed with some type of cancer, usually small-cell lung cancer, within two to three years