Review Systematic review of movement disorders mislabeled as functional: when incongruence misleads 2026 Marín-Medina et al

Andy

Senior Member (Voting rights)

Abstract​

Background​

Misdiagnosis of functional movement disorders (FMD) remains a concern for clinicians. We sought to review the phenomenology and clinical features associated with FMD misdiagnosis.

Methods​

We conducted a systematic review of case reports, case series, and observational studies of adults diagnosed with FMD and subsequently reclassified as having another neurological or medical condition. PubMed was searched from inception to September 13, 2025, focusing on reported features of inconsistency, incongruence with known diseases, and low-validity features. Isolated (iMD) and mixed (mMD) movement disorders were analyzed separately.

Results​

Forty-two included studies comprised 150 patients, of which 73 cases underwent detailed analysis. Gait disturbance (35%) and dystonia (27.5%) were the most common iMD phenomenologies (n = 40), while jerks and rigidity (24%) were the most common mMD phenomenology (n = 33). Incongruence with known diseases (50.7%), psychological factors (34.2%), and symptom variability (31.5%) were the main factors associated with misdiagnosis. Application of incongruence alone was associated with the highest rate of FMD misdiagnosis, similar to that of applying neither incongruence nor inconsistency (49% in both cases). Conversely, reliance on inconsistency alone was least associated with an FMD misdiagnosis (13.7%). Misdiagnoses of iMD were more likely in the absence of documented inconsistency (OR 3.94, 95% CI 1.32—12.82).

Conclusions​

FMD misdiagnoses, particularly of gait disorders and dystonia, were most commonly associated with the application of incongruence as diagnostic criterion. The lowest rate of FMD misdiagnosis was associated with ascertaining at least two positive neurological signs of inconsistency.

Paywall
 
FMD misdiagnoses, particularly of gait disorders and dystonia, were most commonly associated with the application of incongruence as diagnostic criterion
So, misdiagnosis is associated with the main, iffy criterion of a problematic diagnosis. Sounds like a problem. Not that this should surprise anyone, but it will likely bother no one involved with the concept, unfortunately.
 
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