Speech automatism
Introduction
Introduction More common in epilepsy automatic syndrome, there are often verbal autonomic syndromes: mostly simple language repetition or screaming. Speech autopsy refers to some more or less involuntary, meaningless, and purposeless stereotyped movements that occur when the patient's consciousness is still in a turbid state during or after a seizure, and cannot be recalled after waking. The variety of clinical manifestations may be the repetition of the original action, or the new unconscious movement, or the reaction to the hallucinations and illusions.
Cause
Cause
The cause of speech autodiasis
Automated disease refers to some more or less involuntary, meaningless, and purposeless stereotyped movements that occur when the patient's consciousness is still in a turbid state during or after a seizure, and cannot be recalled after waking.
Examine
an examination
Related inspection
Neurological examination of the nervous system
Verbal autopsy
The clinical manifestations are mostly repetition or screaming of simple language.
Diagnosis
Differential diagnosis
Verbal automatic diagnosis
Eating-like auto-sickness: manifests in eating or tasting movements, such as licking lips, licking your tongue, and clearing your throat, often with a certain degree of rigidity, such as running, chewing, swallowing, or nasal spray. Eating-type autopsy is a clinical manifestation that mimics autonomic symptoms.
Imitative autonomic syndrome: visible emotional expressions and physical movements such as horror, happiness, anger and thought.
Gesture Automated Disorder: Simple gestures such as wiping face, licking your mouth, licking your tongue, grasping objects and playing with the genitals, confusing or comprehending the movements; complex gestures such as buttoning or undressing, flipping pockets, whisking, organizing clothes handling Furniture, squatting beds or doing some professional activities. Verbal autophenism: muttering, reciting, accompanied by vocalization or laughter, common repetitive phrases or sentences, need to be differentiated from vocal seizures.
Ambient automatic disease: walking to a certain target, avoiding obstacles can be avoided, sometimes even riding a bicycle or driving through the downtown, the attack lasts for a few seconds to several minutes, and the continuous attack can last for several hours to several days.
False autonomic motor syndrome: also known as hemiplegia autonomic syndrome, seen in the frontal lobe epileptic seizures, common severe swinging, rolling, running-like movements, a certain rhythm, clinical need to identify with snoring.
Sexual autosis: sexual excitability and movement, common in male frontal lobe epilepsy.
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