Exploring the autism and functional neurological disorder association: Considerations from [BPS], neuropsychological and computational model 2025 Cole

Andy

Senior Member (Voting rights)

Abstract​

Evidence is accumulating regarding an association between autism and functional neurological disorder, a common cause for a wide range of neurological symptoms affecting motor, sensory and cognitive systems. Symptoms can include paralysis, tremors, sensory disturbance, vision loss and dizziness. Functional neurological disorder exists at the complex intersection of physical and mental health, neurology and psychiatry, and body and mind. Despite a recent resurgence in clinical and scientific interest, functional neurological disorder has lagged behind other causes of neurological symptoms in research, service development and acceptance. The nature of the association between autism and functional neurological disorder remains uncertain, but several plausible mechanisms can be identified from overlapping areas of research, highlighting endogenous factors such as atypical interoception, motor function, emotional processing and sensorimotor integration, alongside exogenous influences including adversity, healthcare inequality and stigma. This review first provides an overview of functional neurological disorder through various explanatory frameworks before applying biopsychosocial, neuropsychological and computational perspectives to conceptualise its intersection with autism. It then considers how this association might be understood and explores how services could be adapted to better recognise and support autistic individuals with functional neurological disorder across the diagnostic and treatment pathway.

Lay Abstract​

Functional neurological disorder causes real and often disabling symptoms, such as seizures, paralysis, tremors or sensory changes, even though standard medical tests do not show physical damage to the nervous system. Research suggests that autistic people are more likely to experience functional neurological disorder than their non-autistic peers, but the reasons for this are not yet understood. This article explores why autism and functional neurological disorder might occur together. It draws on research into how the brain processes body signals (like pain or movement), handles emotions and responds to uncertainty. It also looks at life experiences that affect health, including trauma, barriers to healthcare and stigma. This article shows that both internal factors (such as differences in movement, emotional awareness and sensory processing) and external factors (such as stress, inequality and misdiagnosis) may increase the chances of functional neurological disorder in some autistic individuals. Several models are introduced to help explain how these influences might interact. Finally, this article outlines how healthcare services could better support autistic people with functional neurological disorder. It encourages functional neurological disorder services to adapt communication styles, provide appropriate adjustments and include autistic voices in research and treatment planning to improve care and outcomes.

Open access
 

Introduction​

Recent cross-sectional and meta-analytic evidence suggests a heightened prevalence of autistic traits or autism spectrum disorder (ASD) (herein referred to as autism) among individuals with functional neurological disorder (FND) (Smythe et al., 2025; Tamilson et al., 2025; Vickers et al., 2024) and, more broadly, those experiencing functional somatic syndromes (FSSs) such as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and chronic pain (Grant et al., 2022).

Functional neurological symptoms do not arise from structural damage to the nervous system (e.g., stroke) but are believed to stem from maladaptive alterations in neural networks involved in attention, interoception and sensorimotor processing (see Supplementary Material for a glossary of terms used in this article) (Hallett et al., 2022). Health events (injury, acute illness, medical procedures) and stressors are common precipitants, with a range of predisposing factors across physical health, mental health and psychosocial domains (Mavroudis et al., 2025).

FND presents with genuinely experienced, often severe, involuntary neurological symptoms, such as weakness, tremors and seizure-like episodes, commonly existing alongside neurological and psychiatric disorders, as well as chronic pain syndromes such as fibromyalgia (Hallett et al., 2022; Popkirov et al., 2019; Steinruecke et al., 2024), all of which occur more frequently in the autistic population (Croen et al., 2015; Grant et al., 2022; Rosen et al., 2018).

Similar to FND, FSS, such as fibromyalgia, is characterised by persistent bodily symptoms without structural pathology (Henningsen et al., 2007). The terminology of FSS usually reflects the body system of the main complaint (e.g., irritable bowel syndrome), yet these conditions all involve nervous system processes such as pain perception, autonomic regulation and visceral function.

[My bolding]
 
Thread on (Grant et al., 2022) here
 
Functional BS aside I have noticed a much higher proportion of neurodivergent folks in LC support groups and ME spaces.

There may well be a real connection here. But this seems to be the approach of associating FND with autism to infantalise the patient group.
 
It's genuinely impressive how much bullshit they packed in such a short abstract. All pseudoscience does is lead to more pseudoscience and less scientific and technological innovation, which is all that actually matters. Some people like this. Damn humans are weird.
 
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