Definitions & Screening - Spotting the Lag
- Developmental Delay: Attaining milestones at a slower pace.
- Global Developmental Delay (GDD): Significant delay (≥2 SD below mean) in ≥2 of the following domains: Gross Motor, Fine Motor, Cognition, Speech/Language, Social/Personal. Applies to children <5 years.
- Intellectual Disability: Term used for children >5 years if GDD persists.
Screening Tools:
- TDSC (Trivandrum): 0-3 years
- DDST (Denver): 0-6 years
- BDST (Baroda): 0-30 months
⭐ Domains of Development: Gross motor, fine motor, language, and social. Always assess all four!

Etiology of Delay - The Why Behind
- Central Nervous System (CNS) Insult
- Prenatal: Intrauterine infections (TORCH), toxins, IUGR.
- Perinatal: Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE), birth trauma, prematurity, kernicterus.
- Postnatal: Meningitis, encephalitis, head injury, seizures.
- Genetic & Chromosomal Syndromes
- Down syndrome, Fragile X syndrome, Rett syndrome.
- Metabolic Disorders
- Hypothyroidism, Phenylketonuria (PKU), Lysosomal storage disorders.
- Sensory Deficits
- Hearing impairment (critical for language).
- Visual impairment (affects fine motor, social skills).
- Environmental & Social
- Psychosocial deprivation, neglect, lack of stimulation.
⭐ Cerebral Palsy, often resulting from perinatal HIE or prematurity, is the most common cause of chronic motor disability in children.

Clinical Evaluation - The Detective Work
- Three-Pillar Approach:
- History: Detailed prenatal (maternal infections, drugs), perinatal (birth asphyxia, prematurity), and postnatal (infections, seizures, nutrition) history. Family history of similar delays is crucial.
- Examination: The cornerstone of diagnosis. Focus on:
- Anthropometry: Head Circumference (HC) is vital. Plot on a growth chart.
- Dysmorphism: Look for unusual facial features, limb anomalies.
- Neurocutaneous markers: Ash-leaf spots, café-au-lait macules.
- Neurological Exam: Assess tone, power, deep tendon reflexes, and persistence of primitive reflexes.
- Screening Tools: Use standardized tools like DASII (Developmental Assessment for Indian Infants) or TDSC (Trivandrum Development Screening Chart).
⭐ High-Yield Fact: A head circumference falling across two major centiles is a significant red flag, often indicating an underlying static or progressive neurological disorder.
Investigations - The Inside Look
- Tier 1 (Screening): Hearing & Vision assessment, Thyroid function (T4, TSH).
- Tier 2 (Specific Pointers):
- Dysmorphism → Karyotyping, Chromosomal Microarray.
- Focal deficits / Seizures → Neuroimaging (MRI preferred).
- Motor delay (esp. proximal weakness) → Creatine Phosphokinase (CPK).
⭐ Always rule out correctable causes first! Impaired hearing/vision and congenital hypothyroidism are common, reversible causes of apparent developmental delay.
- Global Developmental Delay (GDD) is a significant delay in two or more developmental domains.
- Initial evaluation must include hearing and vision screening for all cases of developmental delay.
- Key metabolic investigations include thyroid function tests (T3, T4, TSH) and screening for IEM.
- MRI brain is the preferred neuroimaging modality to rule out structural CNS defects.
- Consider karyotyping and chromosomal microarray (CMA) if dysmorphism or congenital anomalies are present.
- Developmental Quotient (DQ) <70 suggests intellectual disability; formal IQ testing after 5 years.
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