livinglighter
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Personally, I think being cured is most important to patients.
Followed by symptom severity reduction.
Personally, I think being cured is most important to patients.
Well, then.Jon Stone has just published another essay in which he questions whether CODES had the right primary outcome after all. Qualify of life measures are "arguably" more important to patients. Right. According to that theory, patients are more interested in that their seizures are less bothersome to them more than they would prefer not to have seizures at all.
...
They found that there were some areas of the brain, in the ‘Gray’ matter that were smaller in patients with FND than healthy controls. These were particularly in areas of the brain related to movement and sensation and areas that are important in experiencing emotions and ‘fight or flight’ responses.
The changes being reported are all subtle and at a group level, so needs the pooling of the scans of lots of individuals to find a discernible difference. The approach taken to investigate these potential brain changes are using research methods that are not validated for clinical use and the clinical significance of these findings remains poorly understood. Furthermore, they are not detectable on individual brain scans which are typically normal in FND, unless the person has another neurological condition or an incidental finding (those are common occurring in 1 in 6 of the population)....
We don’t know. It could be that people with FND are born with differently structured brains that make them susceptible to the condition....
In fact, people with most psychiatric disorders, such as depression, anxiety and PTSD, have also been found to have structural changes in their brain too, and to a degree that is similar to the studies in FND...
Another possibility is that people with FND develop changes in the structure of the brain as a consequence of having the condition, rather than a cause of the condition. That certainly happens in other neurological conditions....
FND has a really difficult and stigmatised history. For a very long time it was classified as a purely psychological disorder. In the last 20 years we have been uncovering some of the ways in which FND symptoms are caused in the brain, and have made a lot of progress, but we are still a long way from a definite model.
All of this shakes up our preconceived ideas about what a neurological disorder is and what a psychiatric disorder is. It turns out that the division is false and all of them are occurring in the brain.
All of these common clinical features clearly show there is a problem with function which is much more obvious than a subtle problem with structure. If it was the structure then the weakness would not transiently improve, the tremor would not transiently stop, and the gait would not improve....
- People with FND have a pattern of limb weakness that is different to people with structural damage to the brain from stroke and Multiple Sclerosis. In FND the weakness affects parts of the limb most that are strongest in other neurological conditions like stroke. In addition clinical tests like Hoovers sign show that although the patient finds it hard to make the movement – in fact the more they try the worse it gets – those movements can transiently return to normal when they are NOT trying to move it – for example moving the other leg.
- People with FND walking problems (Gait disorder) can sometimes find that they can’t walk normally, but they can run or walk backwards. This seems very strange but actually makes a lot of sense in terms of how we know the brain works.
- People with FND tremor may have a very shaky hand, but when they are asked to copy a movement made by an examiner it may improve or stop. Or it might take on the rhythm of the examiner. These are things that are rare in any other condition
Most people with FND think, at some point, that there must be some damage to their brain to cause the symptoms they have.
Understanding how symptoms can transiently improve and how rehabilitation therapies can build on then to gradually gain greater improvement is a key part of clinical treatment. These new FND treatments have already been shown to be promising in randomised controlled clinical trials.
We may at some stage need to build in an understanding of these structural changes into our models and the way we explain FND. But at the moment we simply don’t have enough data to be able to use this information in a clinically useful way.
If the structural changes have always been there, then that’s clearly important but we still don’t know if they represent an obstacle to improvement.
If the structural changes happen because of the condition, then we need to help patients understand that FND has changed their brain, but treatment can hopefully change it back again.
A lot of that sounds like making stuff up.
Sorry, I didn't make myself clear. I mean some of Stone's answers sound like he's trying to hang on to FND being psychological even if it turns out to involve neurological differences.So neurologists shouldn't be caring for patients with poorly understood neurological conditions because of this?
I'm unsure how neurology rejects conditions based on his explanations of FND.
Sorry, I didn't make myself clear. I mean some of Stone's answers sound like he's trying to hang on to FND being psychological even if it turns out to involve neurological differences.
I certainly wasn't arguing for a lack of appropriate care.
Moved posts
Can anyone explain what Jon Stone is saying now about the structural changes found in the brains of pwFND?
https://neurosymptoms.org/en/faq-2/...-changes-to-the-structure-of-their-brain-too/
Can people with FND have changes to the structure of their brain too?
Why didn’t my MRI scan show these structural changes?
Why are the brains of people with FND structurally different?
So do these studies show that it should now be classified as a purely neurological disorder?
But it shouldn’t be called FND anymore right?
Shouldn’t doctors spend more time explaining these structural changes with patients?
I mean some of Stone's answers sound like he's trying to hang on to FND being psychological even if it turns out to involve neurological differences.
Sorry, I didn't make myself clear. I mean some of Stone's answers sound like he's trying to hang on to FND being psychological even if it turns out to involve neurological differences.
I certainly wasn't arguing for a lack of appropriate care.
Moved posts
Can anyone explain what Jon Stone is saying now about the structural changes found in the brains of pwFND?
https://neurosymptoms.org/en/faq-2/...-changes-to-the-structure-of-their-brain-too/
Can people with FND have changes to the structure of their brain too?
Why didn’t my MRI scan show these structural changes?
Why are the brains of people with FND structurally different?
So do these studies show that it should now be classified as a purely neurological disorder?
But it shouldn’t be called FND anymore right?
Shouldn’t doctors spend more time explaining these structural changes with patients?
"If the structural changes have always been there, then that’s clearly important but we still don’t know if they represent an obstacle to improvement.
If the structural changes happen because of the condition, then we need to help patients understand that FND has changed their brain, but treatment can hopefully change it back again."
Or worse just shifting to the tactic used for 'we didn't mean the mind caused it, just that it can fix it and is part of keeping it there, mind-body la la stuff' that they backtracked the CFS stuff to.
'hardware changes, which we used to not think existed, .... and indeed many of which probably don't exist because the imaging studies tend to be small, and the findings are unreplicated or even countered in subsequent studies and are contaminated by a great deal of bias in their interpretation.What he has written there is basically saying, we know very little or nothing about any of this. And yet we're confident that FND exists and is about software despite obvious "hardware" changes, which we used to not think existed.
Spot on.This is the inevitable result of zero oversight. It’s not that clinicians read Stone and genuflect to his brilliance. They just send people they would rather not bother with down his path
And what are these randomized clinical trials (plural) he's talking about?
He's saying: heads I win, tails you lose. He's wrong, and that means he was always right.Moved posts
Can anyone explain what Jon Stone is saying now about the structural changes found in the brains of pwFND?
https://neurosymptoms.org/en/faq-2/...-changes-to-the-structure-of-their-brain-too/
Can people with FND have changes to the structure of their brain too?
Why didn’t my MRI scan show these structural changes?
Why are the brains of people with FND structurally different?
So do these studies show that it should now be classified as a purely neurological disorder?
But it shouldn’t be called FND anymore right?
Shouldn’t doctors spend more time explaining these structural changes with patients?