Cerebral infarction with one shoulder high and one shoulder low is generally a common symptom of cerebral infarction with hemiplegia and hemiparesis.
Hemiplegia refers to abnormal sensory symptoms on one side of the limb, which is commonly caused by cerebral infarction involving the sensory cortex area or sensory conduction tract, resulting in numbness or abnormal sensation on the opposite side of the hemiplegia, and inability to perceive whether the shoulders are at the same height bilaterally, which results in the patient’s shoulders being high and low.
It is also possible that cerebral infarction causes hemiplegia, the affected side of the limb activity is limited, can not be raised normally, rely on the healthy side to maintain balance, often manifested in walking, often the affected side of the shoulder is higher, the upper limb is flexed, the lower limb is straightened, resulting in the patient’s shoulder is high and low.
However, other factors can not be ruled out, it is recommended that the patient consult a doctor in a timely manner, please ask the doctor to clarify the cause, give targeted treatment, so as not to delay the treatment time.