Locomotor ataxia

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"Nude man with locomotor ataxia walking", Eadweard Muybridge Nude man with locomotor ataxia walking (rbm-QP301M8-1887-546).jpg
"Nude man with locomotor ataxia walking", Eadweard Muybridge

Locomotor ataxia is the inability to precisely control one's own bodily movements. [1]

Contents

Disease

People afflicted with this disease may walk in a jerky, non-fluid manner. They will not know where their arms and legs are without looking (i.e., a failure of proprioception), but can, for instance, feel and locate a hot object placed against their feet. It is often a symptom of tabes dorsalis, which is a key finding in tertiary syphilis.

It is caused by degeneration of the posterior (dorsal) white column of the spinal cord.

The effects of neurosyphilis (such as locomotor ataxia) are dramatized in the story "Love O' Women" by Rudyard Kipling.

Bram Stoker's death certificate named the cause of death as "Locomotor Ataxia 6 months", presumed to be a reference to neurosyphilis. [2] [ additional citation(s) needed ]

References

  1. Denslow, Legrand N. (1909). "I. The Surgical Treatment of Locomotor Ataxia". Annals of Surgery. 49 (6): 737–750. doi:10.1097/00000658-190906000-00001. PMC   1407127 . PMID   17862352.
  2. Davison, Carol Margaret (November 1, 1997). Bram Stoker's Dracula: Sucking Through the Century, 1897-1997. Dundurn. ISBN   9781554881055 via Google Books.