Rooster gait, when standing, the two thighs are close together, the lower legs are slightly apart, the feet seem to stand on the tip of the foot, and when walking like dancing ballet is the tip walk. It is a specific symptom caused by bilateral lesions of the brain or spinal cord. The pathogenesis of this disease has not been completely elucidated, and there are no special measures in prevention. Early detection and treatment is the key. The necessary supports can be customized to practice standing and walking, and special tools such as walkers can be provided to compensate for the lack of function.
Causes: Spinal cord lesions such as inflammation, paraplegia, etc., corticospinal tract lesions, extrapyramidal lesions, simple home spastic paraplegia, paraplegia due to direct manipulation (e.g. firearms, knife stab wounds, etc.) and indirect manipulation (vertebral fractures, dislocations, etc.) of the spinal cord, and paraplegia due to tuberculosis, tumors, viral infections, etc., can all cause this cock The symptoms of gait.
The pathogenesis of this disease has not been fully elucidated, and there are no special measures for prevention. Early detection and treatment is the key.
Cerebrospinal fluid pathogen examination Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) Gait analysis Posture and gait Cerebrospinal fluid examination – chemical examination – protein examination Clinical: 1. The patient can walk with or without crutches, and the limbs are examined for spastic paralysis. Positive pathological reflex.
2, X-ray, MRI, cerebrospinal fluid examination, etc., can indicate the morphological changes and displacement of the compressed vertebral body, and can observe the condition of the spinal canal cavity, by which to determine the degree of spinal cord injury.
Differential diagnosis: duck walking gait: walking waist convex belly, hip swaying from side to side like a duck walking; scissor gait: legs stiff, both feet crossed inward, knees close like scissors, walking gait is small and slow, often toes on the ground and walk like a ballet; rooster gait: standing two thighs close, calves slightly apart, feet like toe standing, walking like a ballet is tip walking; jumping gait: manifested as squatting when The two knees can not come together, the two legs must be separated, both hip joints were abducted, externally rotated posture, as if the hind limbs of the frog when flexed; standing, the two lower limbs mildly externally rotated, can not be completely together, was “external eight”; walking was “eight” concealed Shan gait; fast walking, due to the restriction of hip flexion, gait was jumping, so called jumping gait.