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. 2009 Jan 7;2(1):81–100. doi: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2008.00056.x

Table 2.

Genomic sister-disorders categorized into two groups, each of which shares a suite of partially overlapping phenotypic traits

Psychotic-spectrum syndromes Autistic-spectrum syndromes
Smith–Magenis Potocki–Lupski
 High levels of sociability (Smith et al. 1998; Sarimski 2004) High rates of autism and autistic behavior (Moog et al. 2004; Potocki et al. 2007)
 Relative strength in verbal skills (Dykens et al. 1997)
 Case reports of ‘bipolar episodes’ (Girirajan et al. 2006)
 Case report of mood disorder (Bersani et al. 2007)
Velocardiofacial Velocardiofacial-region duplications
 Better verbal than visual–spatial skills (Bearden et al. 2001; Lajiness-O'Neill et al. 2006) Hyperactivity, attention deficits, anxiety, depression, seizures, speech problems, impulsivity (Ensenauer et al. 2003; Yobb et al. 2005; Alberti et al. 2007)
 High rates of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorders, bipolar, depression, anxiety, phobia (Gothelf 2007) Case report of autism (Mukaddes and Herguner 2007)
Case report of Asperger syndrome (Hassed et al. 2004b)
Two cases of autism (Marshall et al. 2008)
Two cases of autism (Christian et al. 2008)
Williams Williams-region duplications
 Better verbal than visual–spatial skills (Vicari et al. 2004) Severe language impairment, visual-spatial skills spared (Berg et al. 2007)
 Hypersociability, fascination with faces (Doyle et al. 2004) High rates of autism and autistic behavior (Berg et al. 2007; Depienne et al. 2007)
 Dyslexia (Temple 2006)
 High rates of anxiety and phobias (Meyer-Lindenberg et al. 2006; Lincoln et al. 2007)
Klinefelter Turner
 Dyslexia (Geschwind et al. 2000) Hyperlexia (Temple and Carney 1996)
 Poor verbal skills, preserved visual- spatial skills (Money 1993; DeLisi et al. 2005) Good verbal skills, impaired visual- spatial skills (Money 1993; Kesler 2007)
 High rates of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, schizotypy, bipolar disorder, anxiety, depression (DeLisi et al. 2005; van Rijn et al. 2005; Boks et al. 2007)* Gaze aversion (Lawrence et al. 2003)
 High rates of autism and autistic traits in maternal-X cases (Skuse et al. 1997)
 Reduced incidence of schizophrenia plus bipolar disorder (Mors et al. 2001)
Idiopathic schizophrenia Idiopathic autism
 Low birth weight (Wahlbeck et al. 2001; Nilsson et al. 2005) High or average birth weight (Sacco et al. 2007;Mraz et al. 2007; Sugie et al. 2005)
 Slow growth (Niemi et al. 2005) Small head, brain size (Gur et al. 2007) Overgrowth, faster body growth (Dissanayake et al. 2006; Mills et al. 2007; Mraz et al. 2007; Fukumoto et al. 2008)
 Better verbal than visual–spatial skills (Kravariti et al. 2006) Macrocephaly (Lainhart et al. 2006; Stanfield et al. 2008)
 Dyslexia (Bersani et al. 2006; Revheim et al. 2006) Hyperlexia (Newman et al. 2007)
 Overlap in genetic basis with bipolar disorder, major depression, and schizotypy (Craddock and Forty 2006; Van Den Bogaert et al. 2006; Blackwood et al. 2007; Fanous et al. 2007; Potash 2006 Better visual–spatial than verbal skills in subset of cases (Caron et al. 2006)

‘Psychotic-spectrum’ syndromes involve an increased incidence of psychotic-spectrum psychiatric conditions (mainly schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety, and phobias), and ‘autistic-spectrum’ syndromes involve autistic traits, autism and Asperger syndrome.

*

Two case studies have described autism or autism-spectrum disorders (PDD-NOS) in Klinefelter individuals (Jha et al. 2007; Merhar and Manning-Courtney 2007). These cases were characterized by speech delay and introversion, with no evidence of restricted interests or motor stereotypies in the four children described.