Pathogenesis and pathophysiology of functional psychogenic movement disorders, 2019, Baizabal-Carvallo et al.

SNT Gatchaman

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Pathogenesis and pathophysiology of functional psychogenic movement disorders
Baizabal-Carvallo; Hallett; Jankovic

Functional movement disorders (FMDs), known over time as “hysteria”, and “dissociative”, “conversion”, “somatoform”, “non-organic” and “psychogenic” disorders, are characterized by having a voluntary quality, being modifiable by attention and distraction but perceived by the patient as involuntary. Although a high prevalence of depression and anxiety is observed in these patients, a definitive role of psychiatric disorders in FMDs has not been proven, and many patients do not endorse such manifestations. Stressful events, social influences and minor trauma may precede the onset of FMDs, but their pathogenic mechanisms are unclear.

Patients with FMDs have several abnormalities in their neurobiology including strengthened connectivity between the limbic and motor networks. Additionally, there is altered top-down regulation of motor activities and increased activation of areas implicated in self-awareness, self-monitoring, and active motor inhibition such as the cingulate and insular cortex. Decreased activation of the supplementary motor area (SMA) and pre-SMA, implicated in motor control and preparation, is another finding.

The sense of agency defined as the feeling of controlling external events through one´s own action also seems to be impaired in individuals with FMDs. Correlating with this is a loss of intentional binding, a subjective time compression between intentional action and its sensory consequences. Organic and functional dystonia may be difficult to differentiate since they share diverse neurophysiological features including decreased cortical inhibition, and similar local field potentials in the globus pallidus and thalamus; although increased cortical plasticity is observed only in patients with organic dystonia.

Advances in the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of FMDs may be helpful to understand the nature of these disorders and plan further treatment strategies.

Link | PDF (Neurobiology of Disease)
 
Posting in relation to Walitt et al.

The rTPJ seems to monitor feedforward signaling of movements from the dlPFC, and acts as a mismatch detector by processing discrepancies between internal motor intentions and actual motor consequences, playing an important role in self-agency

Decreased functional connectivity between the rTPJ and the right sensorimotor cortex, bilateral cerebellum, bilateral SMA and right insula in patients with a variety of FMDs compared to healthy controls using resting state fMRI has been identified. However, increased functional connectivity between the rTPJ and the left insula was observed in individuals who had history of childhood abuse, but not in those with anxiety or depression
 
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