This week is Downโs Syndrome Awareness Week and this week weโll be highlighting how stem cells can be used to help people with Downโs.
There are around 40,000 people in the UK who have Downโs Syndrome and 1:1000 babies born in the UK will have Downโs, thatโs around 8,000 a year[1].
Downโs Syndrome occurs at conception and is caused by an extra chromosome in the babyโs cells. Downโs is an irreversible condition, there is no cure. People with Downโs do not suffer from the condition and they are not ill, it is not a disease[2]. ย However, people with Downโs Syndrome are more likely to suffer from certain health problems because they have Downโs, problems which can be helped or even cured with stem cells.
One such problem is Congenital Heart Defect. A congenital heart defect means that it is a heart defect that you are born with. Around 50% of children with Downโs Syndrome will be born with a congenital heart defect, of those 60% will need hospital treatment[3].
Another health issue faced by those with Downโs is an increased likelihood of developing leukaemia, in fact children with Downโs are 10 to 20 times more likely to develop the illness than those without Downโs[4].
Both congenital heart defects and Downโs Syndrome can be diagnosed in pregnancy, giving parents theย opportunity to bank their babyโs umbilical cord blood. The opportunity to do this only presents itself once and can give parents extra security knowing they have a stem cell match for their child and the opportunity to access emerging and regenerative therapies.
Many parents of children with Downโs worry about the increased risk of their child developing dementia. ย It is a common belief that children with Downโs develop dementia and at an early age. A recent study showed that children with Downโs were no more likely to develop dementia than those without Downโs[5].
[1] http://www.downs-syndrome.org.uk/about/general/
[2] http://www.downs-syndrome.org.uk/about/general/
[3] http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Downs-syndrome/Pages/Complications.aspx
[4] http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/pdq/treatment/childAML/HealthProfessional/page8
[5] http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Downs-syndrome/Pages/Complications.asp