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Differential risk for developmental reading disorders in the offspring of compensated versus noncompensated parents
Authors:Jeffrey W Gilger  Elizabeth Hanebuth  Shelley D Smith  Bruce F Pennington
Institution:(1) University of Kansas, USA;(2) University of Colorado, USA;(3) Boys Town National Research Hospital, USA;(4) University of Denver, Denver, USA;(5) SPLH Department, University of Kansas, 3031 Dole Human Development Building, 66045 Lawrence, KS, USA
Abstract:When one or both parents have a history of developmental reading disorder (RD) in childhood, the risk to their offspring for developing reading problems is substantially increased. However, risk research has usually assumed a stability of reading problems across the lifespan (i.e., if a parent was affected in childhood, he or she remains affected in adulthood). Yet, some individuals with RD in childhood compensate for the disorder as they grow older. Both an environmental and genetic hypothesis would predict that the risk for RD in offspring will vary as a function of parental compensation. This study examined whether risk to offspring was dependent on the parents' successful or unsuccessful compensation for their childhood reading problems. Two large family data sets were analyzed (N=907). Diagnoses with either an age discrepant or IQ discrepant criteria essentially showed that having at least one still affected parent (i.e., RD both as a child and as an adult) put the offspring at a higher risk for RD than having at least one compensated parent (i.e., RD as a child but not as an adult). The lowest risk to an offspring occurred when both parents were never affected (i.e., not RD as a child or as an adult). The implications of these findings are discussed with regard to counseling and early diagnosis of reading problems.
Keywords:Compensation  Dyslexia  Environment  Familial aggregation  Genetics  Risk
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