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. 2020 Apr;41(4):911-915.
doi: 10.1007/s10072-019-04185-8. Epub 2019 Dec 12.

Functional gait disorders, clinical phenomenology, and classification

Affiliations

Functional gait disorders, clinical phenomenology, and classification

José Fidel Baizabal-Carvallo et al. Neurol Sci. 2020 Apr.

Abstract

Background: Functional gait disorders (FGDs) are relatively common in patients presenting for evaluation of a functional movement disorder (FMD). The diagnosis and classification of FGDs is complex because patients may have a primary FGD or a FMD interfering with gait.

Methods: We performed a detailed evaluation of clinical information and video recordings of gait in patients diagnosed with FMDs.

Results: We studied a total of 153 patients with FMDs, 68% females, with a mean age at onset of 36.4 years. A primary FGD was observed in 39.2% of patients; among these patients, 13 (8.5%) had an isolated FGD (a gait disorder without other FMDs). FMDs presented in 34% of patients with otherwise normal gait. Tremor was the most common FMD appearing during gait, but dystonia was the most common FMD interfering with gait. Patients with FGD had a higher frequency of slow-hesitant gait, astasia-abasia, bouncing, wide-based gait and scissoring compared with patients with FMDs occurring during gait. Bouncing gait with knee buckling was more frequently observed in patients with isolated FGD (P = 0.017). Patients with FGDs had a trend for higher frequency of wheelchair dependency (P = 0.073) than those with FMDs interfering with gait.

Conclusions: Abnormal gait may be observed as a primary FGD or in patients with other FMDs appearing during gait; both conditions are common and may cause disability.

Keywords: Disability; Functional movement disorders; Gait; Psychogenic movement disorders.

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