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Huntington's Disease: Hope Through Research

Introduction
What Causes Huntington’s Disease?
How is HD Inherited?
What are the Major Effects of the Disease?
At What Age Does HD Appear?
How is HD Diagnosed?
What is Presymptomatic Testing?
How is the Presymptomatic Test Conducted?
How Does a Person Decide Whether to be Tested?
Is There a Treatment for HD?
What Kind of Care Does the Individual with HD Need?
What Community Resources are Available?
What Research is Being Done?
How Can I Help?
What is the Role of Voluntary Organizations?
Glossary
Information Resources
 
Huntington's Disease: Hope Through Research
This pamphlet was written and published by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS 1998), the United States' leading supporter of research on disorders of the brain and nervous system, including Huntington's disease. NINDS, one of the U.S. Government's 17 National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, is part of the Public Health Service within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
 

Introduction

In 1872, the American physician George Huntington wrote about an illness that he called "an heirloom from generations away back in the dim past." He was not the first to describe the disorder, which has been traced back to the Middle Ages at least. One of its earliest names was chorea,* which, as in "choreography," is the Greek word for dance. The term chorea describes how people affected with the disorder writhe, twist, and turn in a constant, uncontrollable dance-like motion. Later, other descriptive names evolved. "Hereditary chorea" emphasizes how the disease is passed from parent to child. "Chronic progressive chorea" stresses how symptoms of the disease worsen over time. Today, physicians commonly use the simple term Huntington's disease (HD) to describe this highly complex disorder that causes untold suffering for thousands of families.

In the United States alone, about 30,000 people have HD; estimates of its prevalence are about 1 in every 10,000 persons. At least 150,000 others have a 50 percent risk of developing the disease and thousands more of their relatives live with the possibility that they, too, might develop HD.

Until recently, scientists understood very little about HD and could only watch as the disease continued to pass from generation to generation. Families saw the disease destroy their loved ones' ability to feel, think, and move. In the last several years, scientists working with support from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS 1998) have made a significant number of breakthroughs in the area of HD research. With these advances, our understanding of the disease continues to improve.

This brochure presents information about HD, and about current research progress, to health professionals, scientists, caregivers, and, most importantly, to those already too familiar with the disorder: the many families who are affected by HD.

 
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