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Christina Waggaman's avatar

Thank you for this. POTS and hypermobility run in my family and I find this very interesting and helpful to read about!

I had read a paper that posited that the higher rate of neurodevelopmental disorders (ADHD, autism) diagnosed among those who have a hypermobility disorder could have something to do with the disease processes involved with hypermobility/POTS/MCAS affecting neurodevelopment in addition to hormone regulation and inflammation, and that might be why mothers with hypermobile ehlers danlos syndrome have high rates of autistic children compared with the general population.

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7711487/

The causal pathway between this cluster of physical, mental and neurological symptoms sounds complex to disentangle.

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Precision Metabolic Psychiatry's avatar

Dr. Snyder, thank you for this fascinating post. I’ve briefly perused Dr. Meglathery’s website and will check it out again with closer attention.

I’m very interested in learning more about which alleles of the genes described are associated with the dysfunctional polygenic processes.

I’m working on some psychiatric bioinformatics coding and would love to get cracking at a piece of code to identify relevant polygene variance in a genome dataset that may be significant such that clinicians can gain useful insight.

Thanks again for sharing this information with the community.

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