Patient: Description of the condition (onset time, main symptoms, hospital visited, etc.): head up, right hand thrown backwards, thrown high read as high as shoulder, body rushed forward to the left, now the head can not turn freely, head and neck stiffened upwards, mouth and tongue trembling, eyes slanted and turned upwards, tongue twitching so fast, when excited the body will bend under the waist, as if to fall cross. The first half of the night bed trembling, no matter what time to sleep up half an hour as good people, no disease can be seen. Such a disease does not know what to call the disease, in Nanchang saw, no effect, and then in Shanghai Huashan Hospital saw, ate the Barufen, Taibili, ingesting alcohol tablets. I’m not sure what this disease is, but now I can’t control it with this medicine, and I’ve taken CT and self-control shots, but I haven’t found anything. I would like to know what this disease is called. We can’t even tell what it is when the doctor asks, so if we find out what it is, is it a good treatment? I would love to get your help. Li Liping, Acupuncture Department, Hangzhou Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine: It looks like chorea is very likely. Chorea refers to an apparently irregular, rapid, purposeless dance-like involuntary movement of a part of the limb or the whole body. The severity and frequency of choreographic movements vary from person to person, and the joints in the involved area produce alternating straightening, flexion, and twisting movements, with non-stop finger movements. The upper extremities are variable in reaching, dancing, arm raising, forward flexion and backward extension. Involuntary movements of the lower extremities produce a lurching gait and tend to fall. The trunk may also be rotated, overextended or curled. The face is ghostly, with pouting, winking, and tongue spitting. The chorea-like movements can be exacerbated by mental factors and emotional excitement, reduced when lying down and quiet, and disappear when sleeping. The various causes of chorea are 1 hereditary: (1) Huntington’s chorea; (2) benign hereditary chorea; (3) neurospinal erythrocytosis; (4) senile chorea; (5) non-progressive familial choreoathetosis; (6) familial episodic choreoathetosis. Symptomatic: (1) micro chorea; (2) hyperthyroidism; (3) systemic lupus erythematosus; (4) chorea of pregnancy; (5) hyperuricemia; (6) true erythrocytosis; (7) sleeping encephalitis; (8) hypernatremia and hyperglycemia; (9) hypoparathyroidism; (10) Farh’s disease; (11) GM1 ganglioside accumulation disorder; (12) cerebral retinal degeneration (Kufs type); (13) heterozygous cerebral leukodystrophy; (14) toxoplasmosis. Pharmacological: (1) antipsychotics; (2) levodopa-like complexes; (3) phenytoin sodium; (4) antihistamines; (5) estrogens. Eccentric chorea and eccentric throwing disorder: (1) stroke; (2) tumor; (3) trauma; (4) multiple sclerosis; (5) after thalamic surgery.