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Is ALS hereditary from grandparents?
Answer: Most cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are not familial and do not run in families. In a minority of ALS cases, though, the disease may be inherited and occur in multiple family members.
Will I get ALS if my grandfather had it?
This means a parent who has a genetic change (or mutation) that causes ALS has a 50\% chance of passing that mutation to each of his or her children. Both men and women are equally likely to inherit the genetic mutation. Typically, although not always, there will be someone in each generation with ALS and/or dementia.
Can familial ALS skip a generation?
“There may a germline mutation — a mutation in the sperm or egg DNA — which was not expressed in the parent. Or mutations may skip a generation, and if a patient looks far enough back in their family history they might discover someone who had ALS.”
Can ALS run in your family?
Familial: In about 5\% to 10\% of cases, ALS runs in the family. If you have familial ALS, there is a 50\% chance that your children will get it as well.
What did an 8-year old boy say about his grandfather’s death?
An 8-year old boy told me that his grandfather had died two weeks before and he wanted to know how to get over it. He said he thinks about his grandfather all the time and can’t concentrate on anything else.
What happens when you lose your grandparents?
Losing your grandparents might be your first brush with death and grief if you’re young. And without meaning to sound morbid, the thought that your parents could be, well, next, does cross your mind. Even if briefly.
Is it harder to raise kids when you’re a Grandma?
But the logistics of raising kids are much more complicated when you’re the grandma, not the mom. When Andrew first came to live with us, he had some health problems. (His tonsils were so swollen he could barely swallow.)
What to do when you disagree with your grandparent’s parenting?
Avoid judging their parenting style and bite your tongue unless they ask for your advice. If you disagree with their decisions — and you will, sooner or later — keep quiet. Your job is to be the grandparent, not the parent. Instead, respect their parenting efforts and look for reasons to complement them.