Dyslexia (Reading Impairment) vs Rett Syndrome
Dyslexia vs Rett Syndrome in Young Children
Dyslexia and Rett syndrome are very different. Dyslexia is a specific learning difficulty with reading, spelling and decoding in an otherwise typically developing, bright child, becoming clear once formal reading starts around ages 6–8. Rett syndrome is a rare genetic neurodevelopmental condition (usually MECP2-related, almost always in girls) where a baby develops normally then loses skills — especially purposeful hand use, replaced by repetitive hand movements — usually in the second year, and needs prompt medical care. One is a focused reading challenge; the other is a whole-child genetic condition marked by regression.
Two very different words that both touch how a child learns and grows — but they start in completely different places.
In short
Dyslexia is a specific learning difficulty with reading — bright, capable children who find it unexpectedly hard to link letters to sounds, read fluently and spell, even with good teaching. It becomes clear once formal reading begins, usually around ages 6–8. Rett syndrome is a rare genetic neurodevelopmental condition (most often a change in the MECP2 gene) seen almost always in girls, where a baby develops typically for a few months and then loses skills — hand use, movement and communication — usually in the second year. In short: dyslexia is a focused reading challenge in an otherwise typically developing child; Rett syndrome is a whole-body genetic condition that affects movement, hands, speech and overall development.How they differ in everyday life
A child with dyslexia grows and plays like any other child. The difficulty is narrow and specific: confusing similar letters, reading slowly, struggling to sound out new words, or spelling the same word differently each time — despite being clever and curious in conversation. It does not affect how they walk, use their hands or relate to people. It is identified through how a child reads and learns over time, usually after schooling starts, and responds very well to structured, multi-sensory reading support.Rett syndrome looks entirely different. After an apparently normal early infancy, parents notice a regression — a baby who was reaching and babbling begins to lose those skills. A hallmark is the loss of purposeful hand use, replaced by repetitive hand movements such as wringing, squeezing or mouthing. Head growth may slow, walking may become unsteady, and communication changes markedly. This is a medical, genetic condition confirmed through clinical assessment and genetic testing, and it needs prompt paediatric and neurological care.
The key contrast: dyslexia is about reading and spelling in a child whose overall development is on track; Rett syndrome is a genetic, whole-child condition marked by loss of previously gained skills and distinctive hand movements.
When to seek a look
If your school-aged child reads far below what you'd expect from how bright they are, struggles with sounding out words, or dreads reading aloud, that is worth a developmental and learning check — early, structured support makes a real difference. If your baby or toddler loses skills they once had — stops using their hands purposefully, shows repetitive hand-wringing, or regresses in movement or communication — please seek prompt paediatric medical review without delay.The Pinnacle way
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, never from an app or form. Across 70+ centres, our team gently maps how your child reads, moves, uses their hands and communicates, then shapes the right support — drawing on special education and structured literacy for reading difficulties, with occupational therapy and multidisciplinary care where movement and hand skills are affected. Learn more about dyslexia support.Trusted sources
The American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on learning differences and developmental regression; the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on language and literacy; the World Health Organization classification on neurodevelopmental and learning conditions.Next step — Not sure whether your child's reading struggle or change in skills needs support? Book a developmental screening and let a clinician gently map your child's strengths and needs.
What to watch
For dyslexia: a bright school-aged child who reads far below expectation, confuses letters, struggles to sound out words and spells inconsistently. For Rett syndrome: a baby or toddler who loses previously gained skills, stops using hands purposefully, and shows repetitive hand-wringing or mouthing — this needs prompt medical review.
Try this at home
Read aloud together daily without pressure — let your child enjoy stories while you watch how they track words and sounds. And note any skill your child seems to lose rather than gain, so you can share it clearly with a clinician.
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
Is dyslexia related to Rett syndrome?
No. They are unrelated. Dyslexia is a specific difficulty with reading and spelling in a child whose overall development is typical. Rett syndrome is a rare genetic neurodevelopmental condition that affects movement, hand use, communication and development across the whole child.
At what age can dyslexia be identified?
Dyslexia usually becomes clear once formal reading begins, around ages 6–8, because that is when reading and spelling difficulties become apparent despite good teaching. Before then, clinicians watch for early language and sound-awareness patterns rather than labelling.
What is the earliest sign that might point to Rett syndrome?
A hallmark is regression — a baby who developed typically begins to lose skills, especially purposeful hand use, which is replaced by repetitive hand movements like wringing or squeezing. If you notice your child losing skills they once had, seek prompt paediatric medical review.
Does my dyslexic child need medical treatment?
Dyslexia is supported mainly through structured, multi-sensory reading teaching and special education strategies, not medication. With the right support, dyslexic children learn to read and thrive academically.