Our capacity to love has expanded because of our son, Jack. Our vision with this xxy syndrome diagnosis guide is to provide hope & encouragement to parents or expectant parents to boys just like Jack. This practical guide is what helped us tremendously as we anticipated the arrival of our son & navigated his first year of life. Jack continues to thrive in all that we challenge him to, which is only indicative of his very bright future ahead. As parents, we couldn’t be more proud of our boy and couldn’t imagine our world without him! Jacks full story here.
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*The “XXY Syndrome Diagnosis Guide” is based on my own experience and the content in not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you have regarding Klinefelter Syndrome.
Commit to doing your own research and be wary when it comes to outdated research on the internet. Most publications are old, inaccurate, and focus too heavily on the limitations. Knowledge is power! We are committed to becoming students in this field and learning all there is to know about XXY syndrome, so we can make the best-guided decisions for our boy. Our geneticist also offered a great piece of advice: don’t become overly obsessed with research that you miss out on your son’s first year of life. He is still a regular baby just like all the others. As parents, we’ve received the gift of knowledge by discovering at such a young age how Jack will grow, think, learn, and develop. Enjoy this momentous time with your son and find a healthy balance by staying in the loop with the ever-changing research, medical advancements, and studies in the community for xxy syndrome.
If possible, establish a medical team that understands XXY syndrome. By the time Jack was 1 month old, we already established a specialized pediatrician, geneticist, an endocrinologist. It’s refreshing to learn from these doctors instead of having to teach them and advocate for Jack’s care and needs. From our experience, most general doctors are familiar with XXY syndrome, but not enough to offer the best advice and care. Your son deserves the very best! Working as a team is everything.
Our biggest piece of advice would be starting early intervention as soon as possible! At 8 weeks, Jack began occupational therapy & physical therapy sessions weekly. He just started speech therapy this week. The therapy is crucial for motor skills, development, muscle tone, coordination, feeding, etc. When we started, he was delayed by about one month. He is now caught up developmentally and is exceeding the big milestones! It’s not easy, but we push him hard through home therapy and mix in playtime. We’ve added in weekly swim lessons too. Jack continues to progress as he is highly-driven and motivated. He has become quite a fearless little guy. Since learning about his xxy syndrome and tracking milestones, we’ve noticed slight delays in his development, but Jack has worked very hard to break through every single one. We’ve learned to let him run his own race on his own timing. Instead of looking at therapy sessions as a burden, we consider them a blessing. We get the opportunity to watch Jack progress and have the reassurance that we’ve done our part to give Jack the best support early on. It is far better to be proactive than reactive!
Learn to celebrate all the positive traits associated with XXY syndrome instead of focusing on the limitations. (Side note: Jack is an all-star baby and if that’s indicative behavior of how he will be as an adult, then we have hit the jackpot). We’re learning more and more about the positives and plan to help Jack tap into his unique strengths. Instead of trying to dodge or mitigate the weaknesses, help your son identify and explore his strengths.
We are all created uniquely—we all have our own sets of strengths & weaknesses, challenges & triumphs, and ways & rates in which we grow, develop, learn, and communicate. Your son was born with an extra X chromosome, that’s it. Instead of comparing him to “normal” or “typical” kids or seeing him as “different,” celebrate his uniqueness and commit to celebrating all the ways that make him special. For example, instead of anticipating potential learning challenges in school, help your child explore the unique ways he learns and how his brain processes information. Shift your mindset and see XXY syndrome as just a different way of approaching life.
One Response
We live in Hawaii and have no access to a specialty clinic (xxy or otherwise). We have the basics in pediatrics, genetics/endocrinologist/etc, but nobody who knows XXY specifically. We would definitely make a trip to the west coast to visit our bring to visit a specialty clinic, so you have any recommendations?