| Literature DB >> 26877882 |
Leonard L Sokol1, Alberto J Espay2.
Abstract
Clinical signs are critical in ascertaining the functional nature of a gait disorder. Four signs of gait impairment have been documented in the course of examining patients with clinically definite functional (psychogenic) movement disorders: "huffing and puffing" during standing and walking, manipulation-resistance dorsiflexion of the first toe, fixed plantar flexion and inversion, and marked discrepancy between ambulation with and without swivel chair assistance. While large studies are needed to ascertain their prevalence, sensitivity, and specificity, the identification of these signs may help elevate the diagnostic certainty of functional gait disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical signs; Functional gait; Psychogenic gait
Year: 2016 PMID: 26877882 PMCID: PMC4751755 DOI: 10.1186/s40734-016-0031-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Mov Disord ISSN: 2054-7072
Patterns, signs, and supportive features in functional gait disorders
| Overall functional gait patterns | Incongruent functional gait signs | Supportive additional features |
|---|---|---|
| Excessive slowness | “Huffing and puffing” | Variable resistance of feet or leg to passive manipulation |
| Astasia-abasia | Fixed toe extension | |
| Knee buckling | Fixed plantar flexion/inversion | Associated incongruent neurological findings |
| Tightrope walking | ||
| Trembling walking | Swivel chair signs | |
| Truncal jerking |
Fig. 1a. “Huffing and puffing” sign. Excessive demonstrations of effort are illustrated in this man attempting to rise from a chair, disproportionate to any strength or sensory deficits. b. Psychogenic toe sign. Left: the clinician attempts to flex the extended first toe with little success but substantial pain. Right: upon vigorous dorsiflexion of toes 2–5, spontaneous plantar flexion of the first toe is observed. c. Fixed plantar flexion sign. A fixed foot in plantar flexion and inversion prevents weight bearing, and forces the use of an assistive device (walker or wheelchair). A magnified view of the patient’s right foot is shown on the right. d. Swivel chair sign. Above, patient displays a bizarre gait pattern. Below, same patient is able to successfully propel herself in the swivel chair