- Poor growth
- Feeding difficulties
- Breath holding
- Sweating while eating
- Long episodes of vomiting
- Lack of response to painful stimuli
- Seizures
- Hypotonia, low muscle tone
- Repeated fevers
- Repeated episodes of high blood pressure
- Poor coordination - unsteady gait
- Unusually smooth tongue surface
- Decreased taste
- Diarrhea
- Constipation
- Severe scoliosis
- Skin blotching
Infants with this condition have feeding problems and develop pneumonia caused by breathing food into their airways. Vomiting and sweating spells begin as the infant gets older. Young children may also have breath-holding spells that cause them to lose consciousness, since they can hold their breath for long enough to pass out without feeling the discomfort that normal children would. An important sign of Riley-Day syndrome is inability to feel pain. This leads to injuries that might not have occurred had the child felt the pain. Children do not feel the normal sensations such as drying of the eyes, pressure over pressure points, and chronic rubbing and chaffing. Bone and skin pain, including burns, are also poorly perceived. However, they can feel internal pain, such as menstrual cramps. Intelligence is expected to be in the normal range. |