Intellectual Disability Flashcards

1
Q

DEFINITIONS:

A
    • Significant intellectual impairment with associated impaired ability to adapt to normal demands of daily living, onset usually prior to 18y.
      - IQ≤70/2 standard deviations below the mean(IQ=100) with significant impairment in adaptive functioning
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2
Q

CLASSIFICATIONS:

  1. Mild(85%)
  2. Moderate(10%)
  3. Severe(3-4%)
  4. Profound(1-2%)
A
  1. IQ 50-69, subtle difficulties, able to live independently and carry out unskilled/semi-skilled manual labour. usually identified only in later age, academic activities helped by educational programmes.
  2. IQ 35-49, limited language and comprehension, impaired self-care and motor skills. Rarely able to live independently, may be able to work under supervision
  3. IQ 20-34, marked motor impairment, minimal speech in early childhood, capable of only elementary self-care skills.
  4. IQ<20, Severely limited communication, motor impairment, restricted mobility, incontinence. Often requires residential care
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3
Q

AETIOLOGY:

A
  1. Genetic
    - Down’s syndrome, Fragile X syndrome, Phenylketonuria etc
  2. Neurodevelopmental
    - Autism
  3. Prenatal
    - Infections
    - Substance use
    - Pregnancy complications
  4. Perinatal
    - Birth trauma
    - Prematurity
  5. Childhood factors
    - Infections
    - Trauma
    - Toxins
  6. Environmental
    - Neglect
    - Malnutrition
    - Poor linguistic and social stimulation
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4
Q

MANAGEMENT:

  1. Prevention and detection
  2. Family support
  3. Education, training, occupation
  4. Housing and social support
  5. Medical care
  6. Psychiatric care
A
    • Genetic screening, prenatal testing, improved antenatal and neonatal care.
      - Secondary prevention prevents progression of disability through compensatory education and early interventions to reduce behavioural problems
      - If child, refer to paediatrician/CAMHS. If adult, refer to local intellectual disabilities team
  1. Education, practical matters, psychological support
    • Mainstream education if needs can be met
      - May need specialist schools and vocational guidance that better suit needs
      - Mainstream/supported employment(Remploy)
  2. Assess daily living tasks, if severe difficulties, may need residential care
  3. Communication difficulties, specialist nurses
    • More caution with medication
      - Higher prevalence of co-morbid mental illness
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