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Rett Syndrome vs Sensory Processing Differences

Rett Syndrome vs Sensory Processing Differences in Young Children

Rett Syndrome and Sensory Processing Differences can both involve repetitive movements, but they are very different. Rett Syndrome is a rare genetic neurodevelopmental condition (usually a MECP2 change, almost always in girls) marked by regression — loss of purposeful hand use and words after early typical development — and needs prompt medical assessment. Sensory Processing Differences are not a disease but a difference in how a child registers and responds to everyday sights, sounds, textures and movement, usually without loss of skills. The deciding question is whether a child is losing abilities she once had: regression points to medical evaluation, while strong sensory reactions point to a developmental and occupational therapy look.

Rett Syndrome vs Sensory Processing Differences in Young Children
Rett Syndrome vs Sensory Processing Differences — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

One is a rare genetic condition that changes a child's development; the other is a difference in how the brain takes in everyday sights, sounds and touch — and telling them apart matters.

In short

Rett Syndrome is a rare neurodevelopmental condition, caused in most cases by a change in a single gene (usually MECP2), seen almost entirely in girls. After a stretch of seemingly typical early development, a child slows down or loses skills she had gained — purposeful hand use and spoken words often fade, and characteristic repetitive hand movements (wringing, washing or tapping) appear. Sensory Processing Differences are not a disease but a difference in how the nervous system registers and responds to everyday sensations — some children are overwhelmed by noise, textures or light, others seek out more movement and pressure. The key contrast: Rett involves regression and loss of acquired skills with a known biological cause, while sensory differences involve how a child reacts to the world, usually without losing abilities.

How they differ in everyday life

With Rett Syndrome, parents often notice a worrying change — a daughter who babbled and reached for toys begins to lose those skills between roughly 6 and 18 months. Hand skills are replaced by repetitive midline hand movements, walking may become unsteady, and head growth can slow. Because it is genetic and can affect movement, breathing and seizures, it needs prompt medical assessment, not therapy alone.

With Sensory Processing Differences, a child keeps her skills but responds differently to sensation. She might cover her ears at the blender, refuse certain food textures or clothing tags, crave spinning and crashing, or seem clumsy and bump into things. These patterns affect comfort, attention and behaviour, but there is no loss of previously gained abilities.

The overlap that confuses families: both can show repetitive movements and both can affect everyday functioning. The deciding question is usually — is my child losing skills she once had? Regression points towards a medical evaluation; reactivity to everyday sensations points towards a sensory and developmental look.

When to seek help

Any loss of skills a child previously had — words, hand use, social smiles, walking — is always a reason for prompt review by a paediatrician or developmental specialist. Strong, distressing reactions to sounds, textures or movement that disrupt daily life, sleep or feeding are worth a developmental and occupational therapy assessment. You do not need a label to start — you need an unhurried, qualified look.

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 team observes how your child moves, plays, communicates and responds to the world, then guides you — towards medical referral where a condition like Rett Syndrome is suspected, or towards occupational therapy where sensory differences are shaping daily life. Backed by 2.5 billion+ data points and 25 million+ therapy sessions across 70+ centres, our focus is your child's strengths.

Trusted sources

The World Health Organization's ICD-11 on neurodevelopmental conditions; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on developmental monitoring and when skill loss warrants review; the American Occupational Therapy guidance via ASHA partners on sensory and daily-function support.

Next step — Worried about skill loss or strong sensory reactions? Book a developmental screening and let a Pinnacle clinician look closely and guide your next step.

What to watch

Watch for loss of skills a child once had — fading words, loss of purposeful hand use replaced by repetitive hand-wringing or tapping, unsteady walking, or slowing head growth; these point to a medical review. Separately, note strong distressing reactions to noise, textures, light or movement, or constant seeking of spinning and crashing, that disrupt daily life without any loss of abilities.

Try this at home

Keep a simple two-column note: in one, anything your child has stopped doing that she used to do; in the other, sounds, textures or movements that upset or excite her. This makes the difference between regression and sensory reactivity clearer for your 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 Rett Syndrome the same as a sensory processing difference?

No. Rett Syndrome is a rare genetic neurodevelopmental condition, usually caused by a MECP2 gene change and seen almost entirely in girls, marked by loss of skills after early typical development. Sensory processing differences are a difference in how a child registers and responds to everyday sensations, usually without losing abilities.

What is the biggest clue that it might be Rett Syndrome rather than sensory differences?

Regression — a child losing purposeful hand use, words or other skills she previously had, often with new repetitive hand movements like wringing or washing. Any loss of acquired skills warrants prompt review by a paediatrician or developmental specialist.

Can a child have both sensory differences and a condition like Rett Syndrome?

Children with many conditions, including Rett Syndrome, can also experience sensory differences. A qualified clinician looks at the whole picture rather than a single feature before guiding diagnosis and support.

Does my child need a diagnosis before starting support?

No. You can begin with a developmental screening. If skill loss is the concern, a clinician will guide medical referral; if everyday sensory reactions are the concern, occupational therapy support can begin without waiting for a label.

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