Sydenham's chorea is characterized by the abrupt onset (sometimes within a few hours) of
neurological symptoms, classically
chorea, which are non-rhythmic, writhing or explosive involuntary movements. Usually all four limbs are affected, but there are cases reported where just one side of the body is affected (
hemichorea). Typical chorea includes repeated wrist
hyperextension, grimacing, and lip pouting. The fingers can move as if playing the piano. There may be tongue
fasciculations ("bag of worms") and
motor impersistence, for example, the "milkmaid sign" (grip strength fluctuates, as if
hand milking a cow), or inability to sustain tongue protrusion (called
jack-in-the-box tongue or
serpentine tongue, as the tongue slides in and out of the mouth), or eye closure. There is usually a loss of
fine motor control, which is particularly obvious in
handwriting if the child is of school age. Speech is often affected (
dysarthria), as is walking; legs will suddenly give way or flick out to one side, giving an irregular
gait and the appearance of skipping or dancing. Underlying the abnormal movements is often low tone (
hypotonia) which may not become obvious until treatment is started to suppress the chorea. The severity of the condition can vary from just some instability on walking and difficulty with handwriting, to the extreme of being wholly unable to walk, talk, or eat (
chorea paralytica). Movements cease during sleep. It is a neuropsychiatric disorder, so besides the motor problems there is classically emotional lability (mood swings, or inappropriate mood), but also tics, anxiety, attention deficit etc. These can precede the motor symptoms. Non-neurologic manifestations of acute rheumatic fever may be present, namely
carditis (up to 70% of cases, often subclinical, so echocardiography required),
arthritis,
erythema marginatum, and subcutaneous
nodules. Differentiating these signs from other involuntary movements such as
tics and
stereotypies can be difficult, and since these things are not uncommon they can potentially co-exist. Diagnosis is often delayed and attributed to another condition such as
tic disorder or
conversion disorder. The controversial
PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infections) hypothesis has overlapping clinical features, but Sydenham's chorea is one of the exclusion criteria. PANDAS can present with chorea but more typically there are
tics or
stereotypies with a psychological component (e.g.,
OCD). ==Differential diagnosis==