Takes samples of cells from the placenta, they are cultured in a lab and then a karyotype is produced. It is carried out early in pregnancy but has a high risk of miscarriage
Takes samples of cells from the amniotic fluid, they are cultured in a lab and then a karyotype is produced. It is carried out later in pregnancy but has a lower risk of miscarriage compared with CVS
Normal human cells have 46 chromosomes in 22 homologous pairs of autosomes and 1 pair of sex chromosomes. Autosomal disorders affect body cells, sex-linked disorders affect sex cells.
Very rarely expressed, usually skips a generation, affects males and females equally, requires two copies of abnormal allele, can be carried by heterozygous individuals, can result from two unaffected carrier parents. Examples: cystic fibrosis, albinism.
Only one copy of affected gene has to be inherited, affected individuals occur in every generation, affects males and females equally, means anyone affected has an affected parent, can be heterozygous or homozygous for the dominant allele. Example: Huntington's Disease.
Neither version of the allele for the gene is dominant over the other, so when an affected allele is inherited with a normal allele a milder form of the condition occurs. Example: sickle cell anaemia.
Genes on the sex chromosomes are affected (on X chromosome), affects many more males than females as males only need one copy of the defective allele, fathers cannot pass the defective allele to their sons. Examples: haemophilia, Duchenne muscular dystrophy.