Overview
Clinical overview and emergency guidance are pending physician authorship. Graph-derived data (ontology codes, linked conditions, diagnostic biomarkers) is available below.
Associated Conditions
Conditions associated with this symptom based on HPO disease-phenotype annotations.
Juvenile osteochondrosis of tibial tubercle
Occasional (5-29%)
Hutchinson-Gilford syndrome
Frequent (30-79%)
Lubag
Frequent (30-79%)
PPMX - Mental retardation with psychosis, pyramidal signs, and macroorchidism
Occasional (5-29%)
Deafness-dystonia syndrome
Occasional (5-29%)
Hereditary diffuse leukoencephalopathy with axonal spheroids
Mitochondrial membrane protein associated neurodegeneration
Occasional (5-29%)
Primary progressive freezing gait syndrome
Occasional (5-29%)
Early onset parkinsonism and intellectual disability syndrome
Autosomal dominant late onset Parkinson disease
Occasional (5-29%)
Brain dopamine-serotonin vesicular transport disease
Very frequent (80-99%)
Autosomal recessive limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2F
Frequent (30-79%)
Microcephalus with brachydactyly and kyphoscoliosis syndrome
Very frequent (80-99%)
Atypical juvenile parkinsonism
Occasional (5-29%)
Sporadic adult-onset ataxia of unknown etiology
Occasional (5-29%)
X-linked spastic paraplegia type 34
Frequent (30-79%)
Parkinsonism caused by cyanide
Frequent (30-79%)
Premature ageing appearance, developmental delay, cardiac arrhythmia syndrome
Occasional (5-29%)
Protein kinase cAMP-dependent type I regulatory subunit beta-related neurodegenerative dementia with intermediate filaments
Frequent (30-79%)
Pallidopyramidal syndrome
Frequent (30-79%)
X-linked spastic paraplegia type 16
Autosomal dominant late-onset spinal muscular atrophy Finkel type
Occasional (5-29%)
Autosomal recessive progressive external ophthalmoplegia
Occasional (5-29%)
MASA syndrome
Quick Facts
- SNOMED CT
- 43005009
- UMLS CUI
- C0231688
- Fully Specified Name
- Shuffling gait (finding)
- Associated Conditions
- 24
- Diagnostic Tests
- 0
This information is for educational purposes only. If you are experiencing symptoms, please consult a healthcare provider for proper evaluation and diagnosis.