Kids who don’t cry: New genetic disorder discovered

What do you do when your baby lies limp in your arms, staring blankly into the distance while never crying?

What do you do when tests show signs of liver damage and your baby’s seizures won’t stop, but doctors can’t tell you what’s wrong or how to fix it?

Thanks to the Human Genome Project, which was completed in 2003, identifying new genetic mutations has gotten easier and cheaper. But geneticists often struggle to find patients who share these rare DNA quirks. Studying multiple patients with the same gene mutations and similar symptoms is crucial to identifying a new genetic disorder.

That’s why a paper published March 20 in the journal Genetics in Medicine is so remarkable.

Read the full, original story: Kids who don’t cry: New genetic disorder discovered

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