Hitler suffered with a number of health issues
Adolf Hitler's health has been the subject of much conjecture, and the list of problems he is alleged to have lived with is lengthy. Some historians believe Hitler had syphilis (which his personal physicist Theodor Morell diagnosed in a 1945 report to Himmler), Huntington's illness, and Parkinson's disease. The Third Reich condemned the first two of these criteria. In Mein Kampf, syphilis was cited with prostitution as a "Cause of Collapse," and Huntington's disease is a genetic condition that is on state sterilizing lists. A number of studies have found that Hitler had irritable bowel syndrome, skin lesions, heart dysrhythmia, coronary artery disease, syphilis, borderline personality disorder, amphetamine addiction, and, most critically, Parkinson's disease.
Medical historians, on the other hand, were primarily interested in Hitler's probable Parkinsonism. Some relate Hitler's suspected usage of different medicines to the hand tremors that are frequently recognized as indications of Huntington's or Parkinson's disease. According to popular belief, Hitler's Parkinsonism was revealed for the first time in 1945, when a Swedish newsreel was smuggled out, avoiding German supervision. It depicts Hitler walking slowly with a reduced swing in his left hand, indicating bradykinesia, as well as a masked face, stooped posture, and rest tremor. Photographs, eyewitness stories, physician's prescriptions, and his deteriorating handwriting with the resulting micrographia were among the other pieces of evidence of his condition. It's also widely assumed that he had Monorchism, a medical ailment characterized by having just one testicle, however, the sources supporting this are dubious. The first was a second-hand description of an injury sustained during the Battle of the Somme, and the second was refuted by a Soviet doctor participating in Hitler's autopsy.