WHAT IS CEREBRAL PALSY?
A congenital disorder of movement, muscle tone or posture. Cerebral palsy is caused due to abnormal brain development, often before birth. Symptoms include exaggerated reflexes, floppy or rigid limbs and involuntary motions. These appear by early childhood. Long-term treatment includes physical and other therapies, drugs and sometimes surgery.
There are several different types of cerebral palsy — spastic, ataxic, athetoid, hypotonic, and mixed cerebral palsy. These conditions are classified based on mobility limitations and affected body parts. Each type can vary in severity, symptoms, and treatment.
Spastic Cerebral Palsy
Spastic cerebral palsy is the most common type and accounts for 77% of all cases. Also referred to as hypertonic cerebral palsy, most individuals with this type experience high muscle tone and exaggerated, jerky movements (spasticity).
It is caused by damage to the brain’s motor cortex, which controls voluntary movement. It is also caused by damage to the pyramidal tracts, which help relay signals to the muscles. For this reason, this type of cerebral palsy is sometimes referred to as “pyramidal.”
The motor cortex is found on both sides of the brain, and the pyramidal tracts connect each side of the motor cortex to one another. Damage to the right side of the motor cortex causes movement problems on the left side of the body, and vice versa.
SYMPTOMS OF SPASTIC CEREBRAL PALSY:
Common symptoms of spastic cerebral palsy include:
Athetoid Cerebral Palsy
About 2.6% of children with the condition are diagnosed with (also known as non-spastic or dyskinetic cerebral palsy). This type causes issues with involuntary movement in the face, torso, and limbs. Athetoid cerebral palsy is characterized by a combination of hypotonia (loosened muscles) and hypertonia (stiffened muscles) which causes muscle tone to fluctuate.
This type of cerebral palsy is caused by damage to the brain’s basal ganglia and/or cerebellum. The basal ganglia regulates voluntary motor function and eye movement, and the cerebellum controls balance and coordination.
Athetoid cerebral palsy is considered extrapyramidal. The extrapyramidal tracts in the brain regulate involuntary reflexes and movement signaled by the basal ganglia and cerebellum.
SYMPTOMS OF ATHETOID CEREBRAL PALSY:
Ataxic Cerebral Palsy
Ataxic cerebral palsy makes up about 2.4% of all cerebral palsy cases. This type of cerebral palsy causes ataxia and issues with balance, coordination, and voluntary movement. It is caused by damage to the cerebellum, which is responsible for coordinating physical movement. Individuals with ataxic cerebral palsy often experience tremors and a reduction in muscle tone.
SYMPTOMS OF ATAXIC CEREBRAL PALSY:
Hypotonic Cerebral Palsy
It (also known as atonic cerebral palsy) makes up about 2.6% of all cases. This cerebral palsy type is classified by low muscle tone that causes loss of strength and firmness, resulting in floppy muscles. Instability and floppiness in muscles caused by hypotonic cerebral palsy can cause a child to miss developmental milestones such as crawling, standing, or walking.
SYMPTOMS OF HYPOTONIC CEREBRAL PALSY:
Mixed Type Cerebral Palsy
In some cases, damage to the developing brain is not confined to one location. It is possible for a child to develop more than one type of cerebral palsy caused by damage to several areas of the brain. It occurs when a child is showing symptoms of two or more types of cerebral palsy. About 15.4% of all cases are diagnosed as mixed type cerebral palsy.
The most common mixed cerebral palsy diagnosis is a combination of spastic and athetoid cerebral palsy, since both of these types are characterized by issues with involuntary movement.
Copyright © 2023 all right reserved.