Huntington’s disease (HD) is a fatal genetic disorder usually inherited from Parents and often many describe the symptoms of HD as having Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease simultaneously. Symptoms usually appear between the ages of 30 to 50 and worsen over a 10 to 25 every year. The weak people tend to have pneumonia, Heart failure, and other complications. Every person who inherits the expanded HD gene will eventually develop the Huntington disease. Over a period, HD affects the individual’s ability to reason, walk and speak. In approximately 10% of cases have HD in children or adolescents. The symptoms of Juvenile HD are somewhat different than adult-onset HD and it includes Stiffness or awkward walking, increased clumsiness and changes in speech. The ability of learning skills may tend to decline, and the child may lose skills.
Related: Parkinson’s Conference | Parkinson’s Congress | Parkinson’s Disorder Congress | Movement Disorder Conferences | Neuroscience Conference | Neurology Conference
Related Conferences:
6th World Congress on Parkinson’s & Huntington Disease, September 20-21,2020 at Rome, Italy | International Congress of Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders, September 13-17,2020, at Philadelphia, USA | 6th World Parkinson Congress, June 7-10, 2022 at Barcelona, Spain | 7th International Congress on Parkinson's and Movement Disorders, November 14-15,2019 at London, UK | 29th World Congress on Neurology and Therapeutics, February 24-25, 2020 at London, UK
Related Association and Societies:
American Academy of Neurology; Movement Disorders Society; The International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society; Canadian Movement Disorders Group; UK Parkinson’s Action Network; European Neurological Society; European Parkinson’s Disease Association; Danish Movement Disorder Society; Italian Society for the study of Parkinson Disease; Extrapyramidal Diseases and Dementia; Movement Disorder Society of Australia; Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders Society of India; Australian Parkinson’s Disease Society; Movement Disorder Society of Japan