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Rett Syndrome vs Visual Impairment

Rett Syndrome vs Visual Impairment in Young Children

Rett syndrome and visual impairment can look similar in a baby who doesn't reach or engage, but they begin differently. Rett syndrome is a rare genetic neurodevelopmental condition (often linked to the MECP2 gene, mostly in girls) marked by typical early development followed by regression — loss of hand use and words, plus repetitive hand movements. Visual impairment is about how well a child sees, from low vision to blindness, while hands and social interest usually stay strong. The regression pattern and hand-use signature point to Rett; not seeing or following points to vision. Any concern deserves a prompt developmental and eye check.

Rett Syndrome vs Visual Impairment in Young Children
Rett Syndrome vs Visual Impairment: The Difference — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Two very different things that can look alike from across the room — but they begin in different places, and knowing the difference changes everything.

In short

Rett syndrome is a rare genetic neurodevelopmental condition (most often linked to a change in the MECP2 gene) that affects mostly girls. After a period of typical early development, a child may slow down or lose skills she had — especially purposeful hand use and spoken words — and develop characteristic repetitive hand movements. Visual impairment means a child's eyes or visual pathways do not see clearly, ranging from mild low vision to blindness. The key difference: Rett syndrome affects the whole developing brain and body, while visual impairment is primarily about how well a child sees — though both can affect how a child reaches, explores and communicates, which is why they are sometimes confused early on.

How they differ in everyday life

With visual impairment, a baby may not fix on or follow your face, may not reach for toys she cannot see, or may press her eyes, hold things very close, or seem startled by sudden movement. But her hands stay purposeful, her social interest is usually strong, and her development moves forward once she can access the world through touch, sound and adapted play. Vision support and early intervention often unlock steady progress.

With Rett syndrome, the pattern is different and unfolds over time. A girl often develops typically for the first 6–18 months, then enters a phase where progress slows or skills regress — loss of babble or words, loss of meaningful hand use, and the appearance of repetitive hand movements such as wringing, mouthing or clapping. There may also be slowing head growth, walking difficulties, and changes in breathing. It is the regression after typical development and the hand-use signature that point clinicians towards Rett rather than a purely visual difficulty.

When to seek help

Because the early signs can overlap — a baby who does not reach or engage as expected — the safest step for any worry is a proper developmental and eye check. Loss of skills a child once had, repetitive hand movements, or concerns about whether your baby sees you all deserve prompt, gentle assessment. Earlier understanding means earlier, kinder support — whichever path it turns out to be.

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 a form. Our clinicians observe how your child sees, moves, uses her hands and connects, and coordinate the right medical referrals alongside therapy — drawing on occupational therapy for hand use and daily skills and learning more about Rett syndrome support. Explore more across our [services](/).

Trusted sources

The World Health Organization on visual impairment and on developmental conditions; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on monitoring vision and developmental milestones in young children.

Next step — Worried your child isn't reaching, seeing or engaging as expected? Book a developmental screening so a clinician can look carefully and guide you to the right support.

What to watch

Loss of skills a child once had — fading babble or words, loss of purposeful hand use, new repetitive hand movements (wringing, mouthing), or slowing head growth — points towards Rett syndrome. A baby who doesn't fix on or follow your face, doesn't reach for things, presses or holds objects very close, yet stays socially engaged with purposeful hands, points towards a possible vision concern. Either way, seek a prompt check.

Try this at home

Play a simple face-and-reach game: hold a bright, softly sounding toy at arm's length and watch whether your baby turns to look, follows it, and reaches for it. Notice both the looking and the reaching — they tell you different things, and what you observe helps a clinician guide you faster.

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

Can visual impairment be mistaken for Rett syndrome?

Early on, yes — a baby who doesn't reach or engage may worry parents about either. The difference is that in visual impairment hands stay purposeful and social interest is usually strong, while Rett syndrome involves regression of skills and repetitive hand movements after a period of typical development. A clinician can tell them apart with proper assessment.

Does Rett syndrome affect vision too?

Children with Rett syndrome usually have working eyes, and eye contact and 'eye pointing' often become an important way they communicate. The challenge is more with purposeful hand use and overall development than with seeing itself.

Are both conditions present from birth?

Visual impairment may be present from birth or appear early. Rett syndrome has a genetic basis from conception, but signs typically emerge after 6–18 months of seemingly typical development, when skills slow or are lost.

What should I do if I'm worried about either?

Book a developmental screening and an eye check. Loss of skills, repetitive hand movements, or a baby who doesn't seem to see you all deserve prompt, gentle assessment so support can begin early.

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