Although confirmation of a specific genetic marker is in a significant number of individuals, there are no tests to clearly determine if this is what a person has. As a syndrome, a diagnosis is typically given for children upon confirmation of the presence of several symptoms listed below. Symptoms are
intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) combined with some of the following: • Often small for gestational age (SGA) at birth (birth weight less than 2.8 kg), or within two or more standard deviations away from the mean weight of 2.8 kg. • Feeding problems: the baby is uninterested in feeding and takes only small amounts with difficulty •
Hypoglycemia • Excessive sweating as a baby, especially at night, and a greyness or pallor of the skin. This may be a symptom of hypoglycemia • Triangular face with a small jaw and a pointed chin that tends to lessen slightly with age. The mouth tends to curve down • A blue tinge to the whites of the eyes in younger children • Head circumference may be of normal size and disproportionate to a small body size • Wide and late-closing
fontanelle •
Clinodactyly • Body asymmetry: one side of the body grows more slowly than the other • Continued poor growth with no "
catch up" into the normal centile lines on growth chart, translating to a low BMI score •
Precocious puberty (occasionally) •
Low muscle tone •
Gastroesophageal reflux disease • A striking lack of
subcutaneous fat • Constipation (sometimes severe) • Rarely found to have heart defects, typically ventricular septal defects and atrial septal defects The earliest among these symptoms to appear is abnormal growth-related symptoms. These symptoms are traditionally noticed at birth and carry on throughout life. It has been noted that children with SRS may be within expected normal growth for their age earlier on but rarely show any signs of continued growth to catch up to the mean size for a child at later stages of their childhood. The average adult height for patients without growth hormone treatment is 4'11" (149.9 cm) for males and 4'7" (139.7 cm) for females. ==Cause==