Epidemiology
Pathophysiology
Risk Factors/
Clinical Presentation
Diagnosis
Treatment
100


Why is the use of Atropine (e.g., in ophthalmology or anesthesia) treated with caution in patients with Down Syndrome?




Individuals with DS exhibit hypersensitivity to cholinergic antagonists, leading to potentially dangerous tachycardia.



100

A child with Down syndrome has a karyotype 46,XX,der(14;21)(q10;q10),+21.
Question: What is the recurrence risk in the next pregnancy if the mother is the carrier?

~10–15% if mother is Robertsonian translocation carrier (14;21)


100

Patient A and Patient B comes to the family planning clinic to discuss expanding their families.

Patient is 24 years old. She had her first child 2 years ago and he has Down Syndrome.

Patient B is 40 years old and has never had a baby.

Which patient is most at risk of having a child with Down Syndrome?

Patient A

100
This is the most accurate prenatal screening test for Down Syndrome and it is done after week __. 

Non-invasive Prenatal Testing (NIPT)

10

100

Is there a curative treatment for Down syndrome? If not, what is the cornerstone of management?

No curative treatment; early intervention and multidisciplinary supportive care is the cornerstone.


200

Which seizure type is most commonly seen in adolescents with Down syndrome?


myoclonic

200

This is the least common cause of Down Syndrome. It accounts for 1-2% of cases.

Mosaicism

200

Which congenital heart disease is pathognomonic for Down syndrome and why is it embryologically linked?


Complete atrioventricular septal defect
(Endocardial cushion defect)

200

How quickly are results available from the FISH test?

24-48 hours

200

List 2 early intervention and developmental support methods.

Speech therapy

Physical therapy

Occupational therapy

Behavioural therapy

Special education programs

300

15-20% of people with Down Syndrome develop ____ in middle age.

a) Hypothyroidism

b) Alzheimer's Disease

c) Depression

d) Behavioural problems

b) Alzheimer's Disease

300

What is nondisjunction and in which of the causes of Down Syndrome is it implicated?

Nondisjunction is the failure of a pair of homologous chromosomes to separate at anaphase so that both chromosomes of the pair pass to the same daughter cell.

Trisomy 21

300

State a dysmorphic feature of the hands OR feet present in a patient with Down Syndrome.

Sandle-toe deformity (space between big toe and the one beside it)

Short broad hands

Palmar crease

300


Which ophthalmological finding is considered a common, benign iris feature in children with Down Syndrome?




Brushfield spots

These are small, white-grayish spots on the periphery of the iris caused by connective tissue aggregation.


300

Why is routine growth hormone therapy not recommended in Down syndrome despite short stature?

Limited cognitive benefit, potential risk of leukemia, and growth failure is largely constitutional.


400

Key intellectual disability gene:

DYRK1A

400

In mosaic Down syndrome, which tissue gives the highest diagnostic yield if blood karyotype is normal?

Best tissue for mosaicism detection:
Skin fibroblasts (or buccal mucosa)

400

In a patient with Down Syndrome and suspected transient myeloproliferative disorder (TMD), which specific genetic mutation is almost universally present in the leukemic blasts?


GATA1 mutations are hallmark features of both TMD and subsequent AMKL in children with Trisomy 21.



400

Which immunological defect explains recurrent respiratory infections in Down syndrome?

  • T-cell dysfunction with reduced naïve T cells


400

A child with Down syndrome and AV canal defect develops early pulmonary hypertension. What is the key treatment strategy?

Early surgical correction of AV canal defect before irreversible pulmonary vascular disease develops.


500

Which neuropathological change explains early-onset Alzheimer disease in Down syndrome? 

APP gene overexpression → β-amyloid deposition

500

What is the molecular mechanism by which increased maternal age predisposes to nondisjunction?

Cohesin protein degradation → spindle assembly checkpoint failure

500


According to the AAP guidelines, at what age should a child with Down Syndrome receive their first screening polysomnography (sleep study) regardless of symptoms?



4 yrs, The high prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea (up to 70%) necessitates a baseline study by this age even if the child is asymptomatic.

500

Hashimoto's thyroiditis is very common in DS, appearing as early as infancy or later in childhood.

What is the mechanism of increased autoimmunity despite immune deficiency?



Autoimmunity in Down syndrome occurs due to defective central and peripheral immune tolerance caused by thymic hypoplasia, impaired regulatory T cells, and interferon-mediated immune dysregulation.


500

Why must chemotherapeutic drug dosing be modified in children with Down syndrome treated for acute leukemia?

Children with Down syndrome have increased sensitivity to chemotherapy due to altered folate metabolism and increased apoptosis, increasing toxicity risk.

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