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∙ 14y agoNo, not necessarily. Most people will match some or many of the symptoms of Asperger's Syndrome (AS) to an extent, but not to a level that it causes impairments. A person with AS can experience the symptom 10 to 100 times worse than the typical person, which will cause impairments in that area. Some characteristics are more likely to be indicators of AS at any level of severity, such as the inability to interpret nonverbal language.
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∙ 14y agoNo, not all sociopath's have every symptom, but what they do have could destroy your life and they don't care. Run...
yes. Not every girl/woman has issues with heart, or a webbed neck, for example. The syndrome affects each woman differently though short stature and infertility are almost always present.
Yes. Every cat has a single bit of asperger syndrome. Its about their personalities and individuality.
Down syndrome is slightly more common among males with most studies showing about 106 to 125 boys for every 100 girls. In some studies younger mothers, who have a lower total chance of having a baby with Down's syndrome, have a more skewed male:female ratio when they do (as high as 173 boys for every 100 girls). No one is sure why boy are affected more often.
fetal alcohol syndrome
Every one is different but for me it was fatigue.
Marfan syndrome is found in 1 in every 5,000 - 10,000 births. If one of your parents has Marfan syndrome, you have a 50% chance of having Marfan syndrome.
1 in every 5,00o to 7,000 people have Marfan syndrome.
The symptoms of swine flu are the same as other more common flu strains. There is no way of knowing if your flu was the swine flu without laboratory testing.
Dead Is Alive Because Eating Tops Every Symptom
the percentage of people born with thos syndrome is yet undecided. considering that Morquio Syndrome is very rare.
I can't speak for the U.S. specifically but according to the National Institutes of Health, Turner Syndrome effects 1 out of every 2,500 female live births worldwide. For more information about it, you can peruse NIH's site at:http://turners.nichd.nih.gov The site has a wide variety of publications you can access, information about current studies, and even the contact information for a NIH doctor if you have questions about the syndrome.