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The complex syndrome of functional neurological disorder
Z. Forejtová, T. Serranová, T. Sieger, M. Slovák, L. Nováková, G. Věchetová, E. Růžička, MJ. Edwards
Language English Country England, Great Britain
Document type Journal Article
NLK
ProQuest Central
from 2001-01-01
Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest)
from 2001-01-01
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
from 2001-01-01
Psychology Database (ProQuest)
from 2001-01-01
- MeSH
- Conversion Disorder * MeSH
- Quality of Life * psychology MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Syndrome MeSH
- Anxiety diagnosis MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
BACKGROUND: Patients with functional neurological disorders (FND) often present with multiple motor, sensory, psychological and cognitive symptoms. In order to explore the relationship between these common symptoms, we performed a detailed clinical assessment of motor, non-motor symptoms, health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and disability in a large cohort of patients with motor FND. To understand the clinical heterogeneity, cluster analysis was used to search for subgroups within the cohort. METHODS: One hundred fifty-two patients with a clinically established diagnosis of motor FND were assessed for motor symptom severity using the Simplified Functional Movement Disorder Rating Scale (S-FMDRS), the number of different motor phenotypes (i.e. tremor, dystonia, gait disorder, myoclonus, and weakness), gait severity and postural instability. All patients then evaluated each motor symptom type severity on a Likert scale and completed questionnaires for depression, anxiety, pain, fatigue, cognitive complaints and HRQoL. RESULTS: Significant correlations were found among the self-reported and all objective motor symptoms severity measures. All self-reported measures including HRQoL correlated strongly with each other. S-FMDRS weakly correlated with HRQoL. Hierarchical cluster analysis supplemented with gap statistics revealed a homogenous patient sample which could not be separated into subgroups. CONCLUSIONS: We interpret the lack of evidence of clusters along with a high degree of correlation between all self-reported and objective measures of motor or non-motor symptoms and HRQoL within current neurobiological models as evidence to support a unified pathophysiology of 'functional' symptoms. Our results support the unification of functional and somatic syndromes in classification schemes and for future mechanistic and therapeutic research.
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