Functional symptoms in neurology: case studies.

In this series of case vignettes, the authors have emphasized that the diagnosis of functional symptoms should normally rest on the presence of positive evidence of the problem being functional rather than the absence of evidence of organic disease. In addition, practitioners should be prepared to m...

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Main Authors: Stone, J, Sharpe, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2006
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author Stone, J
Sharpe, M
author_facet Stone, J
Sharpe, M
author_sort Stone, J
collection OXFORD
description In this series of case vignettes, the authors have emphasized that the diagnosis of functional symptoms should normally rest on the presence of positive evidence of the problem being functional rather than the absence of evidence of organic disease. In addition, practitioners should be prepared to make a functional diagnosis in a patient who also has evidence of disease. Misdiagnosis of functional symptoms occurs no more than for other neuro-logical and psychiatric disorders. The neurologist has an important role in being able to transmit the diagnosis in a way that will not offend the patient but will also facilitate recovery. The key elements of this explanation are making the patient feel believed and emphasizing potential reversibility. A multidisciplinary approach involving concurrent physical and psychological treatments is often recommended, although further study is required to determine the best approaches to explain and treat these conditions.
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spelling oxford-uuid:b482cd1b-a98c-4821-8c44-317e5cca8eb72022-03-27T04:26:36ZFunctional symptoms in neurology: case studies.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b482cd1b-a98c-4821-8c44-317e5cca8eb7EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2006Stone, JSharpe, MIn this series of case vignettes, the authors have emphasized that the diagnosis of functional symptoms should normally rest on the presence of positive evidence of the problem being functional rather than the absence of evidence of organic disease. In addition, practitioners should be prepared to make a functional diagnosis in a patient who also has evidence of disease. Misdiagnosis of functional symptoms occurs no more than for other neuro-logical and psychiatric disorders. The neurologist has an important role in being able to transmit the diagnosis in a way that will not offend the patient but will also facilitate recovery. The key elements of this explanation are making the patient feel believed and emphasizing potential reversibility. A multidisciplinary approach involving concurrent physical and psychological treatments is often recommended, although further study is required to determine the best approaches to explain and treat these conditions.
spellingShingle Stone, J
Sharpe, M
Functional symptoms in neurology: case studies.
title Functional symptoms in neurology: case studies.
title_full Functional symptoms in neurology: case studies.
title_fullStr Functional symptoms in neurology: case studies.
title_full_unstemmed Functional symptoms in neurology: case studies.
title_short Functional symptoms in neurology: case studies.
title_sort functional symptoms in neurology case studies
work_keys_str_mv AT stonej functionalsymptomsinneurologycasestudies
AT sharpem functionalsymptomsinneurologycasestudies