Last Updated 11/2008 - United Cerebral Palsy of Arkansas
UCP of Arkansas is a 501 (c)(3) Non Profit Organization
9720 North Rodney Parham Rd. Little Rock, Arkansas (501) 224-6067 FAX (501) 227-5591
facts3001033.gif facts3001032.gif facts3001031.gif
Cerebral Palsy Organization
What is Cerebral Palsy
Cerebral Palsy History
Effects of Cerebral Palsy
Causes of Cerebral Palsy
Types of Cerebral Palsy
Early Signs of Cerebral Palsy
How is Cerebral Palsy Diagnosed
How many people have Cerebral Palsy
Can Cerebral Palsy be prevented
Can Cerebral Palsy be treated
Research being done on Cerebral Palsy
facts3001029.jpg facts3001028.jpg facts3001026.jpg facts3001025.jpg facts3001024.jpg facts3001023.jpg facts3001022.jpg facts3001021.jpg facts3001020.jpg facts3001019.jpg facts3001018.jpg facts3001017.gif facts3001016.gif facts3001015.gif facts3001014.gif facts3001013.gif facts3001012.gif facts3001011.gif facts3001010.gif facts3001009.gif facts3001008.gif facts3001007.gif facts3001006.gif facts3001005.gif facts3001004.gif facts3001003.gif facts3001002.gif
In the 1860s, an English surgeon named William Little wrote the first medical descriptions of a puzzling disorder that affected children in the first years of life, causing stiff, spastic muscles in their legs and to a lesser degree, their arms. These children had difficulty grasping objects, crawling, and walking. They did not get better as they grew up nor did they become worse. Their condition, which was called Little's disease for many years, is now known as spastic diplegia. It is one of several disorders that affect control of movement due to developmental brain injury and which are grouped together under the term cerebral palsy.

Because it seemed that many of these children were born following premature or complicated deliveries, Little suggested their condition resulted from a lack of oxygen during birth. He proposed this oxygen shortage damaged sensitive brain tissues controlling movement. But in 1897, the famous psychiatrist Sigmund Freud disagreed. Noting that children with cerebral palsy often had other problems such as mental retardation, visual disturbances, and seizures, Freud suggested that the disorder might sometimes have roots earlier in life, during the brain's development in the womb. "Difficult birth, in certain cases," he wrote, "is merely a symptom of deeper effects that influence the development of the fetus."

Despite Freud's observation, the belief that birth complications cause most cases of cerebral palsy was widespread among physicians, families, and even medical researchers until very recently. In the 1980s, however, scientists analyzed extensive data from a government study of more than 35,000 births and were surprised to discover that such complications account for only a fraction of cases--probably less than 10 percent. In most cases of cerebral palsy, no cause of the factors explored could be found. These findings from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) prenatal study have profoundly altered medical theories about cerebral palsy and have spurred researchers to explore alternative causes.