What is an autosomal recessive disorder? An autosomal recessive disorder is a disorder of the autosomes, basically a disorder of any of any chromosomes which are not a sex chromosome. In the case of NCAH, the gene that is affected is called CYP21A2. The recessive part means that both autosomes of the affected pair must be affected for a person to actually have the disorder. There are three possible autosomal combinations. A person with two normal autosomes. This person is healthy and does not have or carry NCAH. A person with one normal autosome and one affected autosome. This person is healthy and does not have, but does carry, NCAH. A person with two affected autosomes. This person has NCAH. If two carriers were to get married, the statistical probabilities for their resulting offspring are shown in the image on the right. (Source) This shows all those combinations.While NCAH is the one of the most common autosomal recessive disorders, it is still classified by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) as a rare disease, meaning that under 200,000 people in the United States have been diagnosed as having this disease at this time. However, I suspect that this disease is less rare than the NIH believes, and that this it is simply under-diagnosed.
One thing I hope to do with this blog is raise awareness of this disorder and hopefully help people who have this disorder learn more about it, but even more importantly help people who have this disorder and have not been diagnosed realize their condition and become diagnosed and also help raise awareness. This is a very treatable disorder which, if left untreated, can really mess with a person's life on many levels, and I am so very grateful that I had an endocrinologist who was so alert to the discrepancies in my blood work and investigated further instead of accepting my previous diagnosis.