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What Is SMA?
Causes of SMA
The four types of SMA
Diagnosing and Prognosis
Type I (some Type II)
Type II (some Type III)
Type III and Type IV

Understanding
SMA
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What Causes Spinal Muscular Atrophy?
SMA is an autosomal recessive genetic disease. In order for a child
to be affected by SMA, both parents must be carriers of the abnormal
gene and both must pass this gene on to their child. Although both
parents are carriers the likelihood of a child inheriting the disorder
is 25%, or 1 in 4.
An individual with SMA has a missing or mutated gene (SMN1, or survival
motor neuron 1) that produces a protein in the body called Survival
Motor Neuron (SMN) protein. This protein deficiency has its most
severe affect on motor neurons. Motor neurons are nerve cells in
the spinal cord which send out nerve fibers to muscles throughout
the body. Since SMN protein is critical to the survival and health
of motor neurons, without this protein nerve cells may atrophy,
shrink and eventually die, resulting in muscle weakness.
As a child with SMA grows their bodies are doubly stressed, first
by the decrease in motor neurons and then by the increased demands
on the nerve and muscle cells as their bodies grow larger. The resulting
muscle atrophy can cause weakness and bone and spinal deformities
that may lead to further loss of function, as well as additional
compromise of the respiratory (breathing) system.
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