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PRADER-WILLI SYNDROME

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Title: PRADER-WILLI SYNDROME


1
PRADER-WILLI SYNDROME
  • Presented by
  • The Prader-Willi Syndrome Project
  • for New Mexico

2
HISTORY
  • 1956
  • 3 Doctors from
  • Switzerland
  • A syndrome is a set of
  • characteristics
  • Incidence Rate
  • 112-15,000 live births

3
GENETICS15th chromosome from father
  • Paternal Deletion
  • A band of genes
  • 15q11-q13 is missing from the 15th chromosome
    coming from the father
  • 75 of people with
  • PWS
  • Maternal Dysomy
  • the genetic material on the mothers 15th
    chromosome duplicates onto the fathers
    chromosome
  • 25 of people with
  • PWS

4
INHERITED PWS
  • Incidence less than 1/10 of 1
  • Mutation on fathers 15th chromosome
  • Child can inherit the mutation
  • Mosaic PWS

5
MORE ON GENETICS
  • In Paternal Deletion there can be micro and macro
    deletions
  • Deletions may be influencing the other genes on
    chromosome 15
  • Genes on chromosome 15 may be influencing a
    tendency toward depression and bi-polar disorders

6
AND MORE
  • In Maternal Dysomy the child receives a double
    dose of the mothers genetic inheritance
    residing on chromosome 15
  • Angelmans Syndrome is a mirror image of PWS
    where deletions and duplications occur on the
    mothers 15 chromosome - manifests as a
    different syndrome
  • Genetic research continues including treatment
    with gene therapy

7
DIAGNOSIS
  • PWS can now be diagnosed with a blood test called
    a protein mythelation assay.
  • Results can be obtained in a couple of weeks.
  • Test is 99 accurate.

8
HYPOTHALAMUS
  • Regulates
    Regulates
  • Body
    Secretion
  • Processes
    of

  • Hormones
  • Functions

9
HYPOTONIA
  • . Delayed fetal movement
  • . Weak cry lethargy
  • . Feeding difficulties
  • . Delayed motor skills
  • . Speech difficulties
  • . Scoliosis/Hip Dysplasia
  • . Myopia/Strabismus
  • . Unbalanced , uncoordinated gait

10
HYPOTONIAChildren
  • Orthopedic evaluation
  • Strabismus sometimes requiring surgery
  • Vision screening
  • Monitoring for scoliosis (surgery)
  • Monitoring for hip dysplasia (surgery)

11
HYPOTONIA OBESITY
  • The complications of morbid obesity (30 or more
    overweight) happen sooner for persons with PWS
    because of the hypotonia

12
HYPOGONADISM
  • Small genitals
  • Low levels of sexual hormone
  • Incomplete puberty due to hypothalamus not
    triggering the pituitary gland
  • Risk for premature osteoporosis
  • Low levels of Growth Hormone

13
MALE HYPOGONADISM
  • Undescended testes
  • Small penis
  • Lack of growth spurt
  • Lack of secondary sexual characteristics
  • Infertility usual

14
FEMALE HYPOGONADISM
  • Small genitalia
  • Absent/irregular menses
  • Lack of growth spurt
  • Lack of secondary sexual characteristics
  • Infertility usual

15
HYPOMENTIA
  • All have Learning Disabilities
  • Mental Retardation
  • IQ scores range from 35-110, most testing around
    70

16
HYPOMENTIACognitive Strengths
  • Fine Motor Skills
  • Long Term Memory
  • Visual Perceptional Skills
  • Verbal Skills/Receptive Language
  • Artistic Abilities

17
HYPOMENTIACognitive Challenges
  • Abstract/Conceptual Thinking
  • Auditory Short Term Memory
  • Loss of Learned Information
  • Set of Specific Learning Disabilities
  • . Sequencing . Generalizing
  • . Social Context . Meta-Cognition

18
LYING PWS
  • Lying to get out of trouble
  • Lying to manipulate
  • Confabulations the telling of tall tales for no
    apparent reason
  • Type of lying determines the response

19
BEST PRACTICES FOR THE CLASSROOM
  • Structure consistency is essential for
    management of PWS needs to be visually
    presented
  • Activities a full day moving from one to
    another with no hanging out
  • Individual attention as much as possible
  • Positive reinforcement as much as possible
  • Peer relationships need to be encouraged
  • Visual learners

20
MORE BEST PRACTICES
  • Some children with PWS are easily over-
    stimulated and have short attention spans may
    need to make environmental accommodations
  • Concrete, hands-on learning style learn by
    doing
  • Need to be weighed and measured weekly, same time
    and same scale
  • Therapies often OT, SLP and PT

21
HYPERPHAGIA the food
problem
  • Non-functioning Hypothalamus
  • No feeling of fullness satiety
  • Always feeling hungry insatiable appetite
  • Slower metabolism up to 1/3 slower
  • Gain weight 3 times faster need 1/3 fewer
    calories
  • Cant raise basal metabolic rate little weight
    loss with exercise
  • Too much adipose tissue and not enough lean
    muscle mass making them feel mushy

22
FOOD SEEKING
  • Incessant hunger makes person constantly think
    about food and how to get it
  • Body thinks its starving survival instinct is
    stuck on ON
  • Person does whatever they have to do to obtain
    food
  • Out of their control like you holding your
    breath and then body takes over and breathes for
    you

23
FOOD SEEKING AT SCHOOL
  • Should be expected
  • Most of it is opportunistic result of failure
    of caretakers to follow rules
  • Forgive yourself start again
  • Successful food stealing encourages food seeking
  • If occurring weekly, food security not established

24
FOOD STEALING
  • Ask for food do not take it let family know
    if child chooses to eat it
  • Establish consequence ahead of time may require
    searches
  • Respond matter- of-factly
  • Do not be angry, lecture or apologize
  • Once its over, its over

25
DANGERS OF MORBID OBESITY
  • Cardio-pulmonary Disease
  • Hypertension
  • Obstructive Sleep Apnea
  • Pickwickean Syndrome
  • Incontinence
  • Type II Diabetes as early as 6 years old
  • Edema
  • Skin sores
  • Yeast Infections
  • Inability to walk
  • Right side heart failure

26
MORBID OBESITY
27
MORBID OBESITYMedical Implications
  • Growth charts with children
  • Regular weighing
  • Pulmonary functioning exams sometimes leading to
    sleep studies
  • Regular screening for Type II diabetes
  • Echocardiograms- right side heart
  • failure
  • Care of skin and effects of self-abuse

28
DIETARY MANAGEMENT
  • Supervision around food no food around
  • Modified lunch menus
  • No money at school
  • Pre-plan parties treats do not exclude
  • Watch for food trading the generosity of
    children

29
SECONDARY MANIFESTATIONS
  • Almond-shaped eyes
  • Tented upper lip
  • Narrow temples
  • Narrow jaw
  • Larger space between nose and mouth
  • Straight ulnar border
  • Smaller hands feet
  • Pear-shapedtorso
  • Short stature
  • Hypo pigmentation
  • Thicker saliva leading to dental problems

30
FACIAL FEATURES
31
BODY FEATURES
32
HYPOTHALAMUS DYSFUNCTION
  • Brain arousal
  • Internal body temperature
  • High pain tolerance
  • Difficulty with or inability to vomit
  • Reactions to medications is different
  • Symptoms of illness

33
EXPERIENCE OF ILLNESS
  • The body registers the pain or illness but the
    mind does not perceive it
  • The person acts out the pain or illness
  • . Disorientation .Vomiting
  • . Confusion . Memory loss
  • . Fatigue . Odd
    behaviors
  • . Loss of appetite . Loss of interest

34
RECENT MEDICAL ISSUES
  • Gorging
  • Water Intoxication
  • Rectal Digging
  • Hernias
  • Gastro-Intestinal Complaints
  • Aspiration
  • Thyroid Problems
  • Acute Idiopathic Gastric Dilation

35
CHECK THE BODY FIRSTINTERNALLY
  • X-RAYS
  • ULTRASOUNDS
  • LAB WORK

36
THE HYPOTHALAMUSEMOTIONS
  • Mood Swings
  • Disproportionate emotional responses
  • Temper tantrums
  • Longer calming time
  • Clinical depression
  • Psychosis

37
THE HYPOTHALAMUSBEHAVIOR
  • Obsessive/compulsive
  • Inflexibility
  • Perseveration
  • Stubbornness
  • Hoarding
  • Aggression/violence
  • Self-trauma

38
STRESS BEHAVIOR
  • Due to genetic reality people with PWS more
    vulnerable to stress
  • PWS itself is a stressor
  • Access to food and food itself is a stressor
  • Too much independence can be a stressor
  • Crisis for persons with PWS is the conflict
    between environment and their personalities and
    coping mechanisms

39
STRESS, BEHAVIOR FOOD
  • Lack of food security Hope Disappointment
    Stress Behaviors
  • Food security No hope No disappointment
    No stress No behaviors

40
DEVELOPMENTAL DELAYS AND BEHAVIOR
  • Delay at the narcissistic stage of development
    around 3 years of age
  • Delay at around 12 years of age in judgment

41
BEHAVIOR APPROACH
  • Look at underlying stressors not each individual
    behavior
  • Often stressors can be modified with
    environmental modifications
  • Reduction of stressors often leads to
    diminishment of behaviors without the need for
    medication

42
A WAY OF LOOKING AT BEHAVIOR
  • When behaviors occur look at
  • 1. Physical illness
  • 2. Stressors
  • 3. Medications SSRIs can trigger the
    mood instability

43
3 MAIN WAYS TO MANAGE PWS BEHAVIORS
  • STRUCTURE
  • CONSISTENCY
  • PREDICTABILITY

44
THE THERAPEUTIC MILIEU
  • Structured daily plan
  • Rules
  • Reward Management System
  • Consequence System
  • Environmental Controls
  • Communication
  • Staff Supervision
  • Food Security

45
REWARD MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
  • Defined system of daily rewards weekly
  • reinforcers
  • Visual reminders point sheet or chart
  • Reinforcers must be varied interesting to
  • the person
  • Individual needs to be involved in choosing
    reinforcers
  • Frequent random praise
  • Data sheets to document progress

46
BEHAVIOR CONTRACTS
  • Identify target behaviors around 3 or 4
  • Write out what is expected
  • Write out consequence
  • Have person team sign contract
  • Give points on a set time frame for absence of
    target behaviors differential reinforcement
  • Points translate into tokens

47
CONSEQUENCE SYSTEM
  • Defined system of consequence initially
    thoroughly presented to person then given low
    attention
  • Consequences given non-confrontationally
  • Not to be used as a threat
  • Must be consistently enforced and cannot be
    changed arbitrarily

48
INTERVENTIONS
  • Must have pre-planned interventions for the
    following PWS possibilities
  • . Elopement running away
  • . Removal to a quiet place to calm
  • . Ability to have person remain in
    quiet
  • place until they do calm down
  • . Physical aggression against self or
  • others requiring an intervention

49
FOOD SECURITY
  • All elements of meals need to be set in advance
  • No arbitrary changes
  • Planned posted menus
  • Limit discussion about food
  • DONT ARGUE
  • All staff trained on diet

50
SUGGESTED INTERVENTIONS FOR PWS BEHAVIOR
  • Stubborn Opposition
  • Negativism, Arguing, Defiance
  • Perseveration
  • Temper Tantrums
  • Intermittent Explosiveness
  • Physical aggression
  • Skin Picking

51
STUBBORN OPPOSITION
  • Planned ignoring of harmless negativity and
    opposition wait it out
  • Give praise immediately for positive behaviors as
    soon as exhibited
  • Do not comfort or cajole
  • Briefly restate request and then stop talking
  • Remain neutral

52
NEGATIVISIM, ARGUING DEFIANCE
  • Use prearranged prompts cues
  • Use low attention redirection
  • Do not continue to respond back
  • Do not engage in arguing, simply restate the rule
    or expectation
  • Let the person have the last word
  • Show with your demeanor that you are calm and not
    going to change your mind.

53
PERSEVERATION
  • Planned ignoring answer question once or
    explain once then STOP to continue will give
    negative attention reinforcement
  • Redirection if person is truly stuck, reduce
    stimulus in environment try to redirect
  • Give praise as soon as topic of perseveration
    changes

54
TEMPER TANTURMS
  • Control physical environment to ensure safety
  • Ignore behavior completely if actions not
    immediately dangerous
  • Give mild neutral praise when person is calm
    and move on

55
PHYSICAL AGGRESSION
  • Control environment remove objects that might
    be thrown secure exits if person elopes
  • Give verbal prompts to calm
  • Intervene physically if there is imminent
  • danger to person or others

56
SKIN PICKING
  • Low attention Redirection
  • Do not punish must live with natural
    consequences
  • Make a contract about picking
  • . Take a picture of lesion
  • . Put antibiotic on wound 4 or more times
  • a day
  • . Establish a small reward for healing
    reward
  • the healing, rather than the not picking
  • . Expect picking at a new area

57
WELL MANAGED PWS
58
ANOTHER
59
A BABY
60
AND TWO OTHERS
61
OUT ABOUT
62
AT THE PROM
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