The symptoms of Asperger’s syndrome are very diverse. The Asperger’s disease is the aggregation of many signs which are sometimes interconnected and sometimes not.
Two patients of Asperger’s disease may have totally different set of symptoms but the aftermath of all these symptoms is the same: the incompatibility of the patient to develop rapport or compatibility with other members of the society. Due to varied symptoms, two patients seem to have different disorder.
The signs of the asperser’s syndrome can be recognized easily at the initial stage of patient’s life. The person having such disorder can be identified at the pre-school stage when he demonstrates lack of interest in other children and does not mix with them nor develops understanding with them.
While dealing with his/her class mates the victim feels problem in ascertaining what is appropriate in a given situation. He seems eccentric and introvert and tries to impose his own interest on others and has no affection for other’s schemes. They respond to the environment in the same way even if the situation is not the same.
For instance they don’t have the capability to comprehend what does a comment of another person indicates. They either take a hilarious situation seriously or a serious situation ridiculously. One of other symptoms includes avoiding eye-contact. The victims of Asperger’s syndrome have peculiar gestures and body language which is extraordinary or abnormal.
The victims of the syndrome are found to have few inclinations and they tend to do those few things repeatedly and most of the time without being bored.
This choosy and selective behavior may lead to extraordinary skill and knowledge in that particular domain. The patients of the syndrome demonstrate undermined motor skills and they may learn to use cutlery at a very late stage.
The syndrome is the “conglomerate” or a complex of many ordinary symptoms and having one or two of the symptoms do not constitute the disorder. It is the aggregate of many symptoms which points towards the disorder.
