AI Article Synopsis

  • Functional movement disorders (FMD) can resemble Parkinson's disease (PD), making it challenging to differentiate between the two, but examining social cognition and other psychological factors may aid in diagnosis.
  • A study involved participants with FMD, PD, and healthy controls to assess their social cognition abilities, attention, and dissociative symptoms, revealing that while both groups struggled with Theory of Mind, only PD showed notable attention issues.
  • Findings suggest that cognitive disturbances in FMD are independent and distinct from the cognitive impairments seen in PD, highlighting that while FMD demonstrates psychodynamic features like dissociation, the line between 'organic' and 'functional' disorders remains unclear.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Functional movement disorders (FMD) can overlap with Parkinson's disease (PD), and distinguishing between the two clinical conditions can be complex. Framing social cognition (theory of mind) (TOM) disorder, attention deficit, and psychodynamic features of FMD and PD may improve diagnosis.

Methods: Subjects with FMD and PD and healthy controls (HC) were administered tasks assessing TOM abilities and attention. The psychodynamic hypothesis of conversion disorder was explored by a questionnaire assessing dissociative symptoms. A comprehensive battery of neuropsychological tasks was also administered to FMD and PD.

Results: Although both FMD and PD scored lower than HC on all TOM tests, significant correlations between TOM and neuropsychological tasks were found only in PD but not in FMD. Only PD showed a reduction in attentional control. Dissociative symptoms occurred only in FMD.

Discussion: Cognitive-affective disturbances are real in FMD, whereas they are largely dependent on cognitive impairment in PD. Attentional control is preserved in FMD compared to PD, consistent with the hypothesis that overload of voluntary attentional orientation may be at the basis of the onset of functional motor symptoms. On a psychodynamic level, the confirmation of dissociative symptoms in FMD supports the conversion disorder hypothesis.

Conclusion: FMD and PD can be distinguished on an affective and cognitive level. At the same time, however, the objective difficulty often encountered in distinguishing between the two pathologies draws attention to how blurred the boundary between 'organic' and 'functional' can be.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10072-024-07452-5DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dissociative symptoms
12
fmd
10
social cognition
8
parkinson's disease
8
functional movement
8
movement disorders
8
conversion disorder
8
neuropsychological tasks
8
attentional control
8
cognition parkinson's
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!