Abstract

BackgroundSeveral studies have shown that when patients with functional neurological disorders are followed up, it is rare to find another neurological condition that better explains the initial symptoms in hindsight. No study has examined the reverse, studying patients with a range of neurological disease diagnoses with the aim of assessing how often a new diagnosis of functional disorder better explains the original symptoms.MethodsA prospective multi-centre cohort study of 2637 new neurology outpatient referrals from primary care in Scotland. Neurologists provided initial diagnoses and a rating of the extent to which their symptoms were explained by an ‘organic’ neurological disease. Patients were followed up 19 months later with a questionnaire to their primary care physician asking about diagnostic change, and when indicated also by discussion with the original assessing neurologist and review of secondary care records.ResultsValid responses were obtained for 2378 out of 2637 patients (90%) with symptoms ‘largely’ or ‘completely’ explained by organic disease at baseline. At follow-up, we found diagnostic errors in 48 patients. Of those, ten (0.4%) had a functional diagnosis and 38 patients (1.6%) had a different ‘organic’ diagnosis which better explained the original symptoms.ConclusionsPatients diagnosed with neurological disease sometimes have a functional diagnosis at follow-up which, with hindsight, better explains the original symptoms. This occurs at a frequency similar to the misdiagnosis of ‘organic’ neurological disease as functional disorder. Misdiagnosis can harm patients in either direction, especially as we enter an era of evidence-based treatment for functional neurological disorders.

Highlights

  • One-third of patients in Scottish general neurology clinics were rated by neurologists as having symptoms ‘somewhat’ or ‘not at all’ explained by recognised neurological disease [1]

  • In an earlier publication from the Scottish Neurological Symptom Study (SNSS) involving 3781 patients, we showed that when these patients were followed up in primary care, it was rare to find a neurological disease which better explained the original presentation over a 19 month period [1]

  • 1 Diagnostic error Patient presented with symptoms that were plausibly due to fibromyalgia

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Summary

Introduction

One-third of patients in Scottish general neurology clinics were rated by neurologists as having symptoms ‘somewhat’ or ‘not at all’ explained by recognised neurological disease [1]. When patients originally diagnosed with an ‘organic’ neurological disease are followed up, how often is there evidence at follow-up of a functional disorder that, with hindsight, better explains the original symptoms? Conclusions Patients diagnosed with neurological disease sometimes have a functional diagnosis at follow-up which, with hindsight, better explains the original symptoms. This occurs at a frequency similar to the misdiagnosis of ‘organic’ neurological disease as functional disorder. Misdiagnosis can harm patients in either direction, especially as we enter an era of evidence-based treatment for functional neurological disorders

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