Marche à petit pas

Marche à petits pas [maʁʃ a pəti pa] (“gait with little steps”) is a type of gait disorder characterised by an abnormal short stepped gait with upright stance (in strict sense, as opposed to generally stooping short-stepped gait of Parkinson's disease), seen in various neurological (or sometimes muscular) disorders. It can be further differentiated from "Parkinsonian gait" by normal arm swing (as opposed to no arm swing in Parkinsonism). This is associated with frontal lobe white matter lesions.[1]

Common causes

Marche à petit pas gait is seen in:

gollark: It's what my modem traffic monitor relies on.
gollark: Er, so HydroNitrogen has a computer relaying stuff from his giant modem array to channel 31415.
gollark: <@!378840449152188419> Please get your modem monitor thing turned back on.
gollark: PotatOS is mostly backward compatible.
gollark: <@114827439070248961> It ought to work.

References

  1. Motor Disorders. In: Simon RP, Aminoff MJ, Greenberg DA. eds. Clinical Neurology, 10e New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
  2. Gait Disorders. In: Srinavasan J; Chaves CJ; Scott BJ; Small JE, eds. Netter's Neurology, 3rd ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.