Rett Syndrome
How Rett Syndrome affects cognitive development
Rett Syndrome is a genetic neurodevelopmental condition, mostly affecting girls, where early development is followed by a regression in hand use, communication and apparent cognitive skills. Cognition is often far better than it appears, because motor and speech impairments hide what a child understands. Communication support, especially eye-gaze technology, can reveal and strengthen that understanding. It needs medical and genetic evaluation alongside therapy.
When a little girl who was learning and reaching suddenly seems to pause, every parent's heart asks the same question — what is happening to her bright mind?
In short
Rett Syndrome is a genetic neurodevelopmental condition (most often linked to changes in the MECP2 gene) that mainly affects girls. After a period of seemingly typical early development, many children go through a phase where learned skills slow or are lost — including hand use, communication and aspects of cognition. Importantly, cognition in Rett Syndrome is far richer than it can appear: many children understand much more than they can show, because the very movements and speech they would use to demonstrate knowing are affected. With the right communication support, that understanding can shine through.How Rett Syndrome touches cognitive development
Rett Syndrome typically unfolds in stages. After 6–18 months of fairly typical growth, families often notice a regression period where skills plateau or fade, hand-wringing or repetitive hand movements appear, and purposeful hand use, walking and spoken words become harder. This naturally affects how a child can demonstrate thinking, memory and problem-solving.What matters most to understand:
- Receptive ability is often underestimated. Because motor control, hand use and speech are so affected, standard tests can badly under-read what a child actually understands. Eye gaze and attention frequently reveal alert, engaged comprehension.
- Communication is the key that unlocks cognition. Many girls use eye-pointing, gaze-based technology (eye-tracking devices) and other augmentative communication to show choices, preferences and learning.
- Skills can stabilise. After the regression phase many children enter a more stable period, and with consistent support some skills can be regained or strengthened.
- It is a spectrum. The degree of cognitive and motor impact varies widely between children, depending partly on the genetic change.
So rather than asking only "how much is lost", the more useful question is "how do we give her every possible route to show — and grow — what she knows".
When to seek assessment
Speak to a paediatrician promptly if a child loses previously gained skills, develops repetitive hand movements with loss of purposeful hand use, shows slowing head growth, or regresses in communication. Because Rett Syndrome has genetic and medical dimensions, it needs medical and genetic evaluation alongside developmental therapy — not therapy alone.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online form or an app. Our therapists focus on opening communication channels and presuming competence, so your daughter's cognition is supported, not underestimated. Explore understanding Rett Syndrome, how we build communication through speech therapy, and how we map your child's strengths with the AbilityScore.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 classification of developmental conditions (icd.who.int); American Academy of Pediatrics developmental guidance (healthychildren.org); CDC resources on developmental regression and milestones (cdc.gov); ASHA guidance on augmentative and alternative communication (asha.org).Next step — If your child has lost skills or you have a Rett Syndrome concern, book a developmental consultation with a Pinnacle clinician for clarity, medical referral and a communication-first plan.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch for loss of previously gained skills (hand use, words), repetitive hand-wringing movements, slowing head growth, and a child who clearly attends and watches but cannot show what she knows — strong attention and eye gaze often signal more understanding than tests capture.
Try this at home
Offer simple choices using your child's eyes — hold up two objects and watch where she looks. Honouring her gaze as a real answer builds communication and shows her you believe she understands.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Does Rett Syndrome always cause intellectual disability?
Rett Syndrome affects cognition, but its impact varies widely and is often underestimated. Because hand use, movement and speech are affected, standard tests can badly under-read what a child actually understands. Many girls show clear comprehension through eye gaze and attention, which is why communication support is so important.
Can a child with Rett Syndrome learn new things?
Yes. After the regression phase, many children enter a more stable period where skills can be maintained, strengthened and sometimes regained. With communication tools like eye-gaze technology and a 'presume competence' approach, children continue to learn and show their abilities.
Is Rett Syndrome treated with therapy alone?
No. Rett Syndrome has genetic and medical dimensions and needs medical and genetic evaluation by a paediatrician or specialist alongside developmental therapy. Therapy supports communication, movement and learning, but it works best as part of coordinated medical care.