Obvious complications and symptoms dealing with a bone disease
It depends on the disorder, but if the child has it and the father doresn't, it most likely means that the disorder was dominant and not recessive. Therefore, the mother would have had to at least have some history of having the disorder.
The child will have the disorder, only if the recessive allele from both the parents is transferred to the child. Therefore, the probability is 1/4.
Developmental needs are something which we grow up with. For example, a young child may be diagnosed with Autism from an early age. This is a developmental disorder as the child developes through life with this disorder. As the child gets older, the disorder may get worse. Some developmental needs may be needed for that child to live a happy life with the disorder.
This could be due to carriers of the gene passing it on to their child, resulting in the child having two copies of the gene - one inherited from each parent - and manifesting the disorder. It is also possible for new mutations to occur in the child that cause the disorder, even if the parents do not carry the gene for it.
no anything can happen
A cleft lip and cleft palate is a disorder in which a baby's lip and/or palate did not fully form while in the mother's womb. One of the complications of a child with a cleft palate include not being able to create suction in their mouth in order to nurse or drink from a bottle.
You might need to indicate what the disorder is.
Well, they take the musculoskeletal system gently in their arms, and then they b-slap the crap out of it until it cries like a little girl. Then they kill the musculoskeletal systems' parents right in front of it, and leave it in a wolf den to die. But the musculoskeletal system is raised by the wolves as a cub, and comes back to challenge all the crime bosses in a kung-fu match. Then you find out that the musculoskeletal system has cancer, and everyone is sad. Until you find out that the musculoskeletal system had a secret love child with Jim Carrey, and that is the sequel, Illegal Drugs 2: Electric Bugaloo.
hope this helps you and your child !
Oppositional Defiant Disorder.
yes
Yes, bipolar disorder can have a genetic component, meaning a mother can pass on a predisposition to the condition to her child. While having a parent with bipolar disorder increases the risk, it does not guarantee that the child will develop the disorder. Environmental factors and individual life experiences also play significant roles in its onset. Overall, the interplay of genetics and environment is complex in the development of bipolar disorder.