At what age do babies with Down syndrome smile?

Social development
Babies with Down syndrome look at faces and smile only a week or two later than other children and they are usually sociable infants. Infants with Down syndrome enjoy communicating and make good use of non-verbal skills including babbling and gesture in social situations.
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When do Down syndrome babies start to smile?

Babies with Down syndrome are normally engaging and affectionate, and their first smile usually occurs only a week or two later than other children. Oftentimes, children with Down syndrome will learn social behavior from others, whether friends in real life or from characters on TV.
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Do Down syndrome babies smile?

Between-group comparisons confirmed previous findings of significantly delayed emergence and less frequent smiling by the infants with Down's syndrome. Their smiles were also found to be shorter, and less discriminative between the two face-to-face conditions.
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At what age is Down syndrome noticeable?

Signs and symptoms often start around age 50. Infections. People with Down syndrome may get sick more often because they tend to have weaker immune systems.
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How can you tell if a baby has a mild Down syndrome?

Some common physical features of Down syndrome include:
  1. A flattened face, especially the bridge of the nose.
  2. Almond-shaped eyes that slant up.
  3. A short neck.
  4. Small ears.
  5. A tongue that tends to stick out of the mouth.
  6. Tiny white spots on the iris (colored part) of the eye.
  7. Small hands and feet.
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Newborn baby with Down Syndrome



Can Down syndrome go undetected?

DSA|OC :: Down Syndrome Association Of Orange County

The most common reason for this late diagnosis is the lack of knowledge in the medical field on this rare form of Down syndrome. However, many individuals can go undiagnosed up into adulthood and there are still thousands who never receive a diagnosis.
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What are the facial features of Down syndrome?

Some common characteristics present in people with the disorder include distinctive facial features, such as slanting eyes, small chin, round face, flat nasal bridge, Brushfield spots in the iris, abnormal outer ears, and flattened nose.
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Can a baby have Down syndrome and not look like it?

Some of the children with Mosaic Down syndrome that we know do not actually look as if they have Down syndrome - the usual physical features are not obvious. This raises some important and difficult social issues and identity issues for both parents and children, which parents have discussed with us.
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Can you be slightly Down syndrome?

Some have two copies of chromosome 21, and some have three. Mosaic Down syndrome occurs in about 2 percent of all Down syndrome cases. People with mosaic Down syndrome often, but not always, have fewer symptoms of Down syndrome because some cells are normal.
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Do babies with Down syndrome babble?

Infants with Down syndrome and typically developing infants began canonical babbling in the first year of life, but the infants with Down syndrome began 2 months later. Once begun, their canonical babbling was less stable than that of typically developing infants.
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Do newborns with Down syndrome cry?

Children with Down syndrome are children, above all else. As babies they cry and sleep, and as they grow they walk and talk.
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Do infants with Down syndrome sleep more?

Babies with Down syndrome may find it harder to develop sleep patterns, get to sleep and stay asleep because their physical features (narrow upper airways, larger tongues and low muscle tone) can make them wake more frequently and make deeper sleep harder to come by.
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How does a Down syndrome child learn?

People with Down syndrome generally take longer to learn new things. New skills may need to be broken down into smaller steps than for other learners and more repetition may be needed to retain learned skills.
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Why do Down syndrome have slanted eyes?

Slanting and a fold of skin (epicanthal fold) are normal in people of Asian descent. Abnormal slanting of the eye may occur with some genetic disorders and syndromes. The most common of these is Down syndrome. People with Down syndrome often also have an epicanthal fold in the inner corner of the eye.
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What are the common signs of a person with Down syndrome?

Common physical signs of Down syndrome include1,2:
  • Decreased or poor muscle tone.
  • Short neck, with excess skin at the back of the neck.
  • Flattened facial profile and nose.
  • Small head, ears, and mouth.
  • Upward slanting eyes, often with a skin fold that comes out from the upper eyelid and covers the inner corner of the eye.
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Can someone with Down syndrome have normal intelligence?

scores for people with Down syndrome vary, with the average cognitive delays being mild to moderate, not severe. In fact, normal intelligence is possible. If a person with Down syndrome has difficulty with hearing, it can be misinterpreted as a problem with understanding.
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Which physical characteristic is most indicative of an individual with Down syndrome?

Down syndrome is usually identified at birth by the presence of certain physical traits: low muscle tone, a single deep crease across the palm of the hand, a slightly flattened facial profile and an upward slant to the eyes.
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Can Down syndrome be missed after birth?

About eight or nine out of 10 cases of Down syndrome are detected (classified as screen positive). This means that one or two out of 10 pregnancies with Down syndrome are missed (classified as screen negative).
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What is the mildest form of Down syndrome?

Mosaicism or mosaic Down syndrome is diagnosed when there is a mixture of two types of cells. Some have the usual 46 chromosomes and some have 47. Those cells with 47 chromosomes have an extra chromosome 21. Mosaicism is usually described as a percentage.
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Do Down syndrome babies have puffy eyes?

Blepharitis (eyelid inflammation) – Children with Down syndrome have a higher rate of inflammation of the eyelids that can cause redness at the edge of the lids and crusting around the lashes.
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What are the physical characteristics of a child with Down syndrome?

Though each child with Down syndrome is unique, common physical characteristics of Down syndrome include: Eyes with an upward slant. Low muscle tone. Short neck and small stature.
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How hard is it to raise a child with Down syndrome?

It's common for parents of babies with Down syndrome to experience shock, sadness and fear over the unknowns of raising a child who has intellectual and developmental disabilities. Serious health problems can add to the panic; about half of all children born with Down syndrome have heart defects.
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What are soft markers for Down syndrome?

Literature Review and suggested protocol for managing ultrasound soft markers for Down syndrome: Thickened nuchal fold, echogenic bowel, shortened femur, shortened humerus, pyelectasis and absent or hypoplastic nasal bone.
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What are the markers for Down syndrome?

Certain features detected during a second trimester ultrasound exam are potential markers for Down's syndrome, and they include dilated brain ventricles, absent or small nose bone, increased thickness of the back of the neck, an abnormal artery to the upper extremities, bright spots in the heart, 'bright' bowels, mild ...
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When should a child with Down syndrome be potty trained?

The average age for toilet training for kids with Down syndrome is 3.5 to 4 years old. That means there are kids taking much longer than that to average out the kids who are training much earlier.
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