Chorea gravidarum or chorea occurring in the first three months of pregnancy. It is most likely to affect women who had rheumatic fever or Sydenham's chorea in childhood.
It is a nervous disorder
Chorea is a movement disorder that involves neurological changes which include twitching, problems with balance, and dementia. A person affected by chorea eventually dies from coma.
Hyperemesis gravidarum rarely causes problems for the unborn baby
Generalized itching
If you have Hyperemesis Gravidarum during one pregnancy you won't necessarily have it in another but you are at greater risk for having it again.
The prognosis of chorea depends on its cause. Huntington's chorea is incurable, leading to the patient's death 10-25 years after the first symptoms appear.
No one knows because the cause of arthritis is at this stage not understood.
the
yes
Sydenham's chorea is a disorder that occurs in children and is associated with rheumatic fever.
true
"of or belonging to pregnant women"