Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Neurosciences Royal Hospital for Children and Young People Edinburgh UK
2. Child Life and Health, MRC Centre for Reproductive Health University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK
3. Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences University of Edinburgh Division of Health Sciences Edinburgh UK
Abstract
AbstractAimTo report incidence, demographic and clinical characteristics, and symptom outcome of functional neurological disorder (FND) in children.MethodChildren diagnosed with FND at a regional children's hospital were prospectively recruited by weekly active surveillance for 36 months. Demographic, clinical, and follow‐up data were retrospectively extracted by review of electronic records. Descriptive statistical analyses were used.ResultsNinety‐seven children (age range 5–15 years) met the case definition of FND (annual incidence 18.3 per 100 000 children). Children with FND were likely to be female (n = 68 [70%]) and older (median 13 years) with no difference in the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (marker of socioeconomic status) compared with the general childhood population. Functional motor (41%) and sensory (41%) symptoms were most common; other somatic symptoms such as headache (31%) and pain (27%) were frequent. Self‐reported psychiatric symptoms and infection/inflammation were the most common predisposing and precipitating factors respectively. At a median of 15 months follow‐up, 49% of 75 children reported improvement or resolution of FND symptoms with no prognostic factors found.InterpretationAt this regional centre, FND in children had a higher incidence than previously reported and a less optimistic outcome than in some other studies.
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Developmental Neuroscience,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
17 articles.
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