Test Overview
The test for
Tay-Sachs disease measures the amount of an
enzyme called hexosaminidase A (hex A) in the blood.
Hex A breaks down fatty substances in the brain and nerves. Tay-Sachs is an
inherited disease in which the body does not break down fatty substances as it
should, so the fatty substances collect in the body and damage brain and nerve
cells.
Normally a child inherits one
gene from each parent that tells the body to make hex
A. If you inherit:
- A pair of genes that does not tell the body to
make hex A, you have Tay-Sachs disease.
- One gene that tells the body to make hex A and one that does not,
you are a
Tay-Sachs carrier. Because your body still makes
enough hex A, you do not have the disease. But you can pass the gene to your
children. If both parents are carriers, there is a 1-in-4 chance (25%) that any
child they have will have Tay-Sachs disease.
A Tay-Sachs test may also measure the amount of another
enzyme, called hexosaminidase B. People who cannot make either hex A or B have
a rare, more serious condition called Sandhoff's disease.
The
Tay-Sachs test is usually done on blood taken from a vein or from the
umbilical cord right after birth. It can also be done
on a sample of
amniotic fluid (collected during
amniocentesis) or on special cells in the
placenta (collected during
chorionic villus sampling).