A Case Report on Huntington’s Disease Presenting with Progressive Motor and Cognitive Decline
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.66222/w3zfd439Keywords:
Huntington’s disease, Chorea, Neurodegenerative disease, Family history, Case reportAbstract
An uncommon, hereditary, autosomal dominant neurological condition, Huntington’s disease (HD) is marked by increasing motor dysfunction, cognitive loss, and mental symptoms (Stoker et al., 2022). A trinucleotide (CAG) repeat expansion in the HTT gene on chromosome 4 is the cause of the illness (Kumar et al., 2020). Clinical onset usually happens in mid-adulthood, and symptoms steadily get worse over time, eventually resulting in death and severe disability (Ogilvie et al., 2023). One important diagnostic characteristic is a rich family history spanning several generations (Kringlen et al., 2017). Genetic counseling, family screening, and proper symptom treatment all depend on early detection of HD.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Syed Muzammil Hussain Shah, Aqsa Ali, Hafsa Urooj, Rabia Anum, Majid Khan, Zainab Liaqat (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
