| Literature DB >> 33281706 |
Anjali Chouksey1, Sanjay Pandey1.
Abstract
Functional movement disorders (FMDs) are not uncommon in children. The age at onset may have a bearing on the phenomenological pattern of abnormal movement, risk factors, and response to different treatment modalities in this age group. FMDs in children resemble their adult counterparts in terms of gender preponderance, but risk factors are quite different, and often influenced by cultural and demographic background. FMDs contribute to a significant proportion of acute pediatric movement disorder patients seen in emergency settings, ranging from 4.3 to 23% in different case series. The most common movement phenomenologies observed in pediatric FMDs patients are tremor, dystonia, gait disturbances, and functional tics. Various social, physical, and familial precipitating factors have been described. Common social risk factors include divorce of parents, sexual abuse, bullying at school, examination pressure, or other education-related issues, death of a close friend, relative, or family members. Physical trauma like minor head injury, immunization, tooth extraction, and tonsillectomy are also known to precipitate FMDs. The response to treatment appears to be better among pediatric patients. We aim to review FMDs in children to better understand the different aspects of their frequency, clinical features, precipitating factors, diagnosis, treatment, and outcome.Entities:
Keywords: children; dystonia; movement disorders; myoclonus; tremor
Year: 2020 PMID: 33281706 PMCID: PMC7688912 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.570151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Clinical clues for different functional movement disorders in children.
| Functional tremor | Entrainment |
| Functional Dystonia | Rapid onset |
| Functional myoclonus | Variability in duration and/or distribution of jerks or of their latency (if stimulus sensitive) |
| Functional gait | Fluctuation of impairment |
| Functional Tics | Not fully stereotypical |
| Features common in functional movements disorders in children | The dominant side is more affected |
Emergence and worsening of tremor in a separate body part when an initially affected body part is suppressed by someone holding it down.
Figure 1Pathogenesis of functional movement disorders in children. The two most critical mechanisms include abnormal emotional processing and neurobiological factors mainly impaired sense of agency, while various predisposing factors include genetic background, exposure to childhood abuse, and perfectionist personality trait. Different precipitating factors can activate neural mechanisms that modify normal sensory processing and thus override voluntary motor control triggering the abnormal movement. Once the functional movement disorders develop, the sick role and secondary gain act as a reinforcement factor. However, in many cases, specific predisposing or precipitating factors are not identified.