Cheshire
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
The analysis suggests that adverse experiences both in childhood and adulthood are associated with the development of functional neurological disorder. However, there was considerable heterogeneity both in the nature of the adverse experiences and also if they occurred at all, with a notable proportion of people reporting no such events.
The idea that adverse childhood and later experiences have an influence on risk of developing (mental) illness is not a new one. For example, rates of adverse events in people with schizophrenia and depression are high. However, in functional neurological disorder these events have seemed to morph from risk factors/associations to the cause. This has had a number of negative consequences:
Importantly, this paper is not an excuse to throw out the idea of an association between adverse life events and functional neurological disorder; rather it calls for us to consider the mechanism of the association and to understand how this should influence treatment (and even prevention). It supports the rebalancing of diagnostic approach, explanation and treatment that has been promoted in recent times and (at the very least) supports allowing the disorder to be classified in ICD-11 in the neurology and psychiatry sections. However, as the authors point out, the hope would be that in the end there would be a merging of these categories to one that recognises the indivisible nature of brain and mind.
- Firstly, it suggests that diagnosis requires the presence of these factors. Under previous iterations of DSM it was not possible to make the diagnosis of conversion disorder without there being a “psychological formulation”. This illogical situation led to some patients being passed between neurologists and psychiatrists in an anti-therapeutic game of ping pong, with neurologists declaring the symptoms to be “non-organic” and psychiatrists declaring the patient to be “psychologically well”.
- Second, it suggests that the only treatment that will help is one that is directed towards the uncovering and resolution of underlying traumatic experiences. In contrast, treatments that work at the level of how symptoms are produced, delivered by psychologists, physiotherapists, occupational therapists were not prioritised or viewed as legitimate or valuable.
- Third, it subsumes the reality of the physical symptoms experienced by the patient within another phenomenon (past trauma) as if the symptoms are not a thing in their own right, and, in a sense, are not real.
https://www.nationalelfservice.net/...al-neurological-disorder-conversion-disorder/
Reminder: Mark Edwards is leading an imaging study on ME/CFS to see if a common mecanism can be found with Functional neurological disorder.
He has also (successfuly) promoted the idea (with Jon Stone) that psychological symptoms should be withdrown from the requirement of FND in DSM 5, making it the one and only psychiatric diagnosis without any psychiatric symptoms (while at the same time vague symptoms were added to the definition of somatic stress disorder (not sure of the name here).
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