Cerebral Palsy Ageing
Causes Loss Of Brain Control Over Movement
Cerebral
palsy is a disorder that one associate with a mother and
child’s medical condition and can occur during
pregnancy’s early stages. However, besides infants, it is
also known to affect adults. The central point of all human activities
is the brain and mind where all decisions on what the body needs to do
are taken. If your brain or mind starts to go wrong it would affect the
entire human system. With cerebral palsy ageing there is a loss of
brain control over movement, though it has yet to be established as to
what the exact causes are.
Cerebral
palsy is often determined after the common symptoms are noticed, which
are often at first ignored by the affected person who might think of
these signs as being a normal part of the ageing process. However, if
you do notice signs of cerebral palsy ageing, they must be brought to
the attention of a doctor without any delay.
Different
Types Of Cerebral Palsy
Cerebral
palsy may result in athetoid that in turn causes grimacing, drooling as
well as having difficulty with speaking. There are a number of types of
cerebral palsy that can affect adults and the level of tolerance is
also different in different instances. It is normal to find spastic,
athetoid as well as ataxic and mixed instances of cerebral palsy
ageing, though spastics are the most common type that are known to
affect patients of cerebral palsy the most.
It
has also been noticed that in cases of cerebral palsy ageing, the
affected person also has a condition of urinary incontinence. It has
also been noticed that cerebral palsy ageing can cause the nervous
system to be damaged that in turn can lead to a lifetime of
inconvenience, if not treated properly.
In
any case, most adults that are concerned about cerebral palsy ageing
wonder how it affects their bodies, and it is also common for those
with disabilities to experience the process of ageing sooner as
compared to those without disabilities. Till recently, cerebral palsy
resulted in untimely death, but with better medical care available
today cerebral palsy need not mean early death, and people are
extending their lives rather than experiencing unwanted physical,
emotional and financial consequences.
There
are a number of physiological as well as psychological factors that
also impact the affected person and it has been observed that ageing
begins earlier with cerebral palsy. With cerebral palsy, there is also
more of a physical challenge that can often lead to the person becoming
spastic, lethargic as well as losing his or her strength as well as
mobility.
Left
unchecked and untreated, this fast ageing can become a cause for much
anxiety for the older adults and according to studies on the subject;
it has been found that most adults believed that their cerebral palsy
caused the ageing process to be accelerated.
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