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Motor Planning Difficulties vs Rett Syndrome

Motor Planning Difficulties vs Rett Syndrome

Motor planning difficulties (dyspraxia) describe a child who knows what they want to do but finds it hard to plan and sequence movement — clumsiness and trouble learning physical tasks, while skills are kept and built over time. Rett syndrome is a rare genetic condition, mainly in girls, marked by a regression — loss of purposeful hand use, slowing head growth, and distinctive repetitive hand movements after a period of typical development. Motor planning affects how movement is organised; Rett syndrome is a defined genetic condition with regression. Any loss of skills always needs prompt medical review.

Motor Planning Difficulties vs Rett Syndrome
Motor Planning Difficulties vs Rett Syndrome — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

One is a difference in how the brain plans and sequences movement; the other is a rare genetic condition with a very particular pattern — knowing the difference brings real clarity.

In short

Motor planning difficulties (often called dyspraxia or part of developmental coordination challenges) describe a child who knows what they want to do but finds it hard to plan, sequence and carry out the movement smoothly — clumsiness, fumbling with steps, trouble learning new physical tasks. Rett syndrome is a rare genetic neurodevelopmental condition, almost always in girls, with a distinctive course: a period of typical early development followed by a regression — loss of purposeful hand use, slowing head growth, and characteristic repetitive hand movements (wringing, washing, tapping). In short: motor planning difficulties affect how movement is organised; Rett syndrome is a defined genetic condition with regression and very specific features.

How they differ in everyday life

With motor planning difficulties, a child generally keeps and builds their skills over time, even if learning them takes longer and looks awkward. You might notice trouble with buttons, riding a tricycle, copying actions, or messy handwriting — but the child is making steady, forward progress and retains abilities once learned. Their understanding, language and social connection usually develop along their own path.

With Rett syndrome, the hallmark is loss of skills a child once had — typically between 6 and 18 months. A baby girl who was babbling and using her hands purposefully may gradually stop, develop repetitive hand-wringing or mouthing movements, lose hand control, and show slowing head growth. There may also be changes in walking, breathing patterns and communication. This pattern of regression is what sets it apart and is why it always needs prompt medical attention.

When to seek help

Any loss or regression of skills your child had already gained — hand use, words, gestures, eye contact — deserves a prompt medical review, not a wait-and-see approach. Persistent clumsiness, difficulty learning physical tasks, or movements that seem hard to organise are best looked at by a developmental team, who can tell whether it reflects motor planning support needs or something requiring genetic and neurological assessment. Early clarity always helps.

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. Our clinicians observe how your child moves, plans and connects, and where regression is a concern they ensure timely medical and genetic referral alongside occupational therapy for motor planning support. Learn more about motor planning difficulties and how we help.

Trusted sources

The American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on developmental milestones and recognising regression; the World Health Organization's ICD on neurodevelopmental and movement-related conditions.

Next step — Noticing clumsiness, or any loss of skills your child once had? Book a developmental screening so a clinician can look closely and guide you to the right next step.

What to watch

Persistent clumsiness and trouble learning new physical tasks may point to motor planning needs. But any loss of skills your child already had — hand use, words, eye contact — or distinctive repetitive hand movements with slowing head growth, needs prompt medical review.

Try this at home

Break new physical tasks into small, named steps and practise them playfully — 'first we hold, then we push'. This supports motor planning. And keep a simple note of skills your child has gained, so you'd quickly notice if any were slipping away.

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 dyspraxia the same as Rett syndrome?

No. Dyspraxia (motor planning difficulties) means a child finds it hard to plan and sequence movement, but generally keeps and builds skills over time. Rett syndrome is a rare genetic condition, mainly in girls, marked by losing skills a child once had, along with distinctive hand movements and slowing head growth.

What is the biggest warning sign of Rett syndrome?

The key feature is regression — a child who was developing typically gradually loses purposeful hand use, words or gestures, often between 6 and 18 months, with characteristic repetitive hand-wringing or washing movements. Any loss of skills needs prompt medical review.

Can a child with motor planning difficulties improve?

Yes. With the right support, including occupational therapy, children with motor planning difficulties learn to organise movement more smoothly. Skills are retained once learned, and steady progress is the usual picture.

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