Rub hands and feet
Introduction
Introduction Picking up the hand: Describe the anxious and uneasy look, the patient manifests as a sporty type of anxiety, that is, hand shake, restlessness and other anxiety symptoms.
Cause
Cause
One of the typical symptoms of anxiety disorders and anxiety-type internet addiction syndrome.
Examine
an examination
Related inspection
EEG examination blood routine involuntary movement examination
One of the typical symptoms of anxiety disorder is frequent mental exercise anxiety, that is, hand shaking, fidgeting, squatting, walking around, often walking, and high frequency blinking, tapping fingers, turning pens and other small movements. .
Anxiety Internet Addiction Syndrome: mainly manifested as motor uneasiness, restlessness, fear, panic, stunned or limb tremor; mood swings, may be accompanied by tension or fear; autonomic dysfunction, such as palpitation Chest tightness, hand shake.
Diagnosis
Differential diagnosis
Paroxysmal involuntary movement: episodic ataxia type III (EA3), also known as paroxysmal ataxia with paroxysmal dance of hand and foot hyperkinesia, usually 2 to 15 years old, mainly manifested as paroxysmal involuntary movement.
Dance-like hand and foot Xu movement: episodes of dance, hand and foot akinesia, that is, involuntary motor syndrome, paroxysmal dance, finger-like movements, also known as exercise-induced epilepsy, paroxysmal dystonia, dance, hand and foot hyperactivity, family Sexual paroxysmal ADHD, focal motor-borne paroxysmal dance, hand and foot hyperactivity disorder, secondary paroxysmal ADHD. This symptom is a hereditary, paroxysmal disease that is extremely rare from childhood.
Both sides of the hand and foot Xu move: hand and foot arrhythmia (athetosis) also known as finger movement, or variability (mobilespasm), characterized by limb distal walking muscle tension increased and reduced movement, the emergence of slow as a creeping twist Creeping. Similar to dystonia, it is not an independent disease unit. It is a relatively slow, untargeted, continuous involuntary motor syndrome in the fingers, toes, tongue, or other parts of the body. This syndrome can be a variety of neurological diseases, divided into three types according to clinical manifestations:
(1) bilateral two-handedness (doubleathetosis): characterized by often accompanied by myoclonus and irregular medium and small amplitude exercise, common in patients with cerebral palsy.
(2) Dance hand and foot hyperactivity disorder (choreoathetosis): a dance-like movement with a large range of hand and foot akinesia, seen in familial episodes of acrobatics, non-progressive familial dance, and acrodynamics.
(3) Unilateral and pseudo-hand and foot movement: Cerebrovascular disease or other causes of deep sensory disturbance, unilateral athetosis and pseudoathetosis are not basal ganglia lesions.
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