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Precursor symptoms of Parkinson's disease?

What are the symptoms of Parkinson's disease?

Most patients in clinical contact only realize that they may have Parkinson's disease when their daily examination or symptoms seriously affect their daily life. But in fact, there will be some clues before the onset of Parkinson's disease. Understanding this common sense is helpful to the early diagnosis and treatment of Parkinson's disease.

(1) Counting money: Your fingers bend and tremble like counting money or rubbing a ball. As long as you change your posture, it will disappear. Mental stress will become serious. This "static tremor" is the earliest symptom of Parkinson's disease. If your fingers occasionally tremble unconsciously, you should pay attention. This is a sign of Parkinson's disease.

(2) Poor sleep: Insomnia is a common disease, but if you often toss and turn, kick your legs involuntarily in bed, wave your arms, or even fall under the bed, it is not simply insomnia.

(3) The word becomes smaller: the initial symptoms of the elderly are mostly "stiff", and the distance between words is getting closer and closer, so be careful.

(4) Slow movement: When people are old, they will slow down anyway. However, patients with Parkinson's disease often feel stiff, slow-moving, bent joints, and sometimes hunched, and they still don't get better after a night's sleep.

(5) Masked face: When facial muscles become tense, the patient's expression changes are no longer so rich, even if he listens to jokes, it seems serious. As the number of blinks decreases, the eyes often feel dry, which may also be a sign of Parkinson's disease.