Freezing gait is a relatively rare gait disorder, which mainly manifests itself when the patient’s gait is significantly impaired when starting, turning or passing through narrow places. Patients feel as if their feet are stuck to the ground and are unable to move, requiring stepping in place and small steps to start. The hesitation is noticeable when starting, as if frozen, but walking is more normal once the freezing phenomenon is removed. This disorder is commonly seen in the middle and late stages of Parkinson’s disease, but also in Parkinson’s syndrome, Parkinson’s superimposed syndrome, such as progressive supranuclear palsy, multisystem atrophy, Lewy body dementia, reversible posterior encephalopathy syndrome, and primary progressive frozen gait, which can also present.