Functional dystonia: A pitfall for the foot and ankle surgeon

Foot Ankle Surg. 2022 Aug;28(6):691-696. doi: 10.1016/j.fas.2021.10.002. Epub 2021 Oct 7.

Abstract

Functional dystonia represents a condition where psychological distress is being expressed as involuntary muscle contractions. In the foot and ankle, it most commonly presents as a sudden onset of a painful fixed ankle/hindfoot deformity in a female patient with a history of trivial trauma or surgery. The "fixed deformity" found on clinical examination is usually correctable under general anesthesia. Less commonly, it can present in the toes or may present as paroxysmal muscle movements rather than a fixed deformity. CRPS may occur concurrently with the dystonia. Failure to consider the diagnosis leads to a long delay in appropriate diagnosis, patient distress and unnecessary or even harmful surgery. A better approach to this clinical syndrome is to define it as fixed abnormal posturing that is most commonly psychogenic. Early referral to a movement disorder clinic is recommended. The prognosis is generally poor as less than a quarter of patients report subjective long-term improvement even when managed in a movement disorder clinic. Foot and ankle surgeons should, whenever possible, avoid operating on patients with functional dystonia in order to avoid symptomatic deterioration.

Keywords: Functional dystonia; Hysteric clubfoot; Hysteric contracture; Post-Traumatic dystonia; Psychogenic contracture.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Ankle
  • Ankle Joint / surgery
  • Dystonia* / psychology
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Movement Disorders*
  • Surgeons*