Infants with cerebral palsy are likely to be amused and to stir their feet. Cerebral palsy is characterized by mental retardation, speech and hearing impairments, psychiatric disorders, and motor developmental abnormalities, which may lead to paralysis in severe cases.
Infants with cerebral palsy may be amused because the main clinical manifestations of cerebral palsy are mental retardation, accompanied by speech and hearing impairment, mental retardation, and abnormal motor development. However, infants with cerebral palsy actually respond to normal stimuli, so it is possible for infants with cerebral palsy to be amused.
Whether or not an infant with cerebral palsy stomps depends on whether the infant with cerebral palsy has soft or hard palsy, as well as the degree of paralysis. For example, some babies with cerebral palsy have high muscle tone, which makes them stomp more forcefully, while some babies with cerebral palsy have low muscle tone and are in a flaccid state, in which case they will stomp less and appear particularly tired.
For more severe cases of cerebral palsy, such as paralysis of the lower limbs, infants will not stir their legs.
Infants with abnormal symptoms need to seek medical attention to identify the cause and intervene promptly to avoid delays.