## Correct Answer: A. Flaccid paralysis Cerebral palsy (CP) is a non-progressive disorder of movement and posture resulting from a lesion in the immature brain. The cardinal feature is **spasticity** (increased muscle tone with velocity-dependent resistance), NOT flaccid paralysis. Flaccid paralysis—characterized by loss of muscle tone and absent reflexes—is seen in lower motor neuron (LMN) lesions (e.g., poliomyelitis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, spinal muscular atrophy). CP involves upper motor neuron (UMN) pathology, producing spasticity, hyperreflexia, and extensor plantar responses. While CP can present with hypotonia in infancy (floppy infant syndrome), this evolves into spasticity by 6–12 months. Flaccid paralysis as a persistent feature is incompatible with CP diagnosis. The condition may include microcephaly (from intrauterine infection or severe perinatal hypoxia), ataxia (cerebellar involvement), and developmental delay, but flaccid paralysis is definitionally absent in CP. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Microcephaly** — Microcephaly is a recognized feature of CP, particularly in cases with severe intrauterine infection (TORCH), severe perinatal hypoxia-ischemia, or genetic syndromes. It reflects underlying brain underdevelopment or atrophy and is documented in 10–15% of CP cases in Indian cohorts. This is a true feature, not an exception. **C. Ataxia** — Ataxic CP (cerebellar form) accounts for ~5–10% of CP cases and is a well-recognized subtype. Cerebellar involvement produces incoordination, dysmetria, and intention tremor alongside the motor disorder. This is a documented feature of CP, not an exclusion. **D. Hypotonia** — Hypotonia is a classic early presentation of CP, particularly in the first 6 months of life (floppy infant). However, this is transient and evolves into spasticity by 6–12 months. Early hypotonia does not exclude CP diagnosis; it is part of the natural progression. Persistent flaccid paralysis, by contrast, is never a feature of CP. ## High-Yield Facts - **Cerebral palsy** is a UMN disorder → spasticity, hyperreflexia, Babinski sign; flaccid paralysis is LMN and excludes CP. - **Hypotonia in infancy** (floppy baby) is common in early CP but evolves to spasticity by 6–12 months; transient hypotonia ≠ flaccid paralysis. - **Ataxic CP** (~5–10% of cases) involves cerebellar pathology and is a recognized subtype alongside spastic and dyskinetic forms. - **Microcephaly** occurs in 10–15% of CP cases, linked to severe perinatal insults (hypoxia-ischemia, TORCH, genetic syndromes). - **Flaccid paralysis** (LMN pattern: areflexia, fasciculations, atrophy) is seen in polio, SMA, GBS—never in CP. ## Mnemonics **CP vs LMN Paralysis** **SPASTIC** (CP) vs **SLACK** (LMN): CP = Spasticity, Pyramidal signs, Hyperreflexia; LMN = Slack tone, Loss of reflexes, Atrophy, Cramps, Kyphosis. Use when differentiating motor disorders. **CP Subtypes (by tone/movement)** **SPADE**: Spastic (70%), Dyskinetic (15%), Ataxic (10%), Diplegia (most common distribution), Extrapyramidal signs. Helps recall that spasticity dominates CP, not flaccidity. ## NBE Trap NBE exploits confusion between early hypotonia in CP (which is transient and evolves to spasticity) and persistent flaccid paralysis (which is LMN and incompatible with CP). Students who conflate "floppy baby" with "flaccid paralysis" may incorrectly select hypotonia as the wrong answer. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian pediatric practice, the "floppy infant" presenting with hypotonia at 2–3 months is often suspected of CP, but the key discriminator is the evolution: CP hypotonia resolves into spasticity by 6–12 months, whereas true flaccid paralysis (polio, SMA) persists and worsens. This temporal progression is critical for early diagnosis and counseling parents. _Reference: OP Ghai Pediatrics Ch. 14 (Cerebral Palsy); Harrison Ch. 451 (Cerebral Palsy and Static Encephalopathies)_
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