Diplegia: Difference between revisions
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'''Diplegia''', when used singularly, refers to [[paralysis]] affecting one part of the body and the corresponding part on the other side of the body — usually both legs. It should not be confused with [[paraplegia]], which is a form of paralysis affecting the entire body. | '''Diplegia''', when used singularly, refers to [[paralysis]] affecting one part of the body and the corresponding part on the other side of the body — usually both legs. It should not be confused with [[paraplegia]], which is a form of paralysis affecting the entire body. | ||
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{{Cerebral palsy and other paralytic syndromes}} | {{Cerebral palsy and other paralytic syndromes}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 00:48, 9 August 2012
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Diplegia, when used singularly, refers to paralysis affecting one part of the body and the corresponding part on the other side of the body — usually both legs. It should not be confused with paraplegia, which is a form of paralysis affecting the entire body.
Spastic diplegia is a condition of neuromuscular hypertonia primarily in the muscles of the legs, hips, and pelvis, and is a form of cerebral palsy. Correspondingly, spastic paraplegia refers to hypertonia affecting the entire body.
For example, facial diplegia occurs in 50% of patients with Guillain-Barre Syndrome.