Chorea (Disease)

Chorea is the occurrence of continuous rapid, jerky, involuntary movements that may involve the face and limb and result in an inability to maintain a posture. It is also known as St. Vitus Dance disease and is seen mostly in children. When chorea is serious, slight movements will become thrashing motions, this form of severe chorea is referred to as "ballism." Walking may become peculiar, and include odd postures and leg movements. Unlike ataxia and dystonia, which affect the quality of voluntary movements or parkinsonism, which is a hinderance of voluntary movements, the movements of chorea and ballism occur on their own, without conscious effort. Chorea may be caused by the dysfunction in the basal ganglia and include: The term Chorea is derived from a Greek word khoreia (a kind of dance, see Chorea (dance)), as the quick movements of the feet or hands are very comparable to dancing or piano playing. See also: Vitus, Movement disorder and Choreoathetosis

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
manoa
samuel wesley stratton
p45
dirty sanchez
roderick sprague
andrew adonis
nathan straus
helicase dependent amplification
kyrie
simpark
number 10 policy unit
william f. quinn
william nuschler clark
henry r. jackson
francesco bianchini
trllaskagi
network service provider
datatecture
skoj
simcopter
wharram percy
riism
paul klebnikov
harvard kyoto
chorea
oikoumene
chorea (dance)
bert jansch
guildford four
lewis lichtenstein strauss
robert schwarz strauss
ernst wollweber
robert strausz hupe
reichsrat (germany)
spice mix
national power unity
ernst streeruwitz
spice up your life
history of technology
chili powder
robert william wilcox
crustation
fritz theilen
say you'll be there