What is Functional Neurological Disorder (FND)?
FND (Functional Neurological Disorder) is real—meaning the symptoms are not “imaginary”—but the underlying issue isn’t a detectable injury or disease like stroke, MS, or a damaged nerve pathway on the usual scans and exams.
Instead, FND is thought of as a problem with how the brain and nervous system are working together: the networks that control movement, coordination, sensation, and predictions about what will happen can become dysregulated. This can lead to symptoms such as weakness or paralysis, abnormal movements (tremor, jerking, dystonia), gait or balance problems, sensory changes, speech problems, and sometimes blackouts/seizure-like episodes.
A key feature is variability: symptoms can worsen or improve depending on context (fatigue, stress, attention, safety, distraction), and they may shift in form over time.
Treatment focuses on retraining the nervous system and reducing the processes that keep symptoms going—often involving education about the diagnosis, physiotherapy/occupational therapy, psychotherapy (trauma-focused or somatic approaches), and addressing comorbid issues like chronic pain, migraine, anxiety, sleep problems, or dysautonomia.
How is FND diagnosed?
Clinicians diagnose FND not by “ruling out everything” only, but by finding positive signs on history and exam—patterns that are typical of functional symptoms (for example, certain inconsistent weaknesses, movement that changes with distraction, or specific features of functional seizures).
Due to similarities, FND can be misdiagnosed as a neurological disorder, and it can take years for the patient to find out that he, she, or they does not actually have a neurological disorder. FND has been diagnosed in children, teenagers, and adults.
FND and the Nervous System
As part of Dr. Moenter’s applied polyvagal approach to working with functional neurological symptoms, she divides symptoms into two categories: those of a nervous system in sympathetic activation (such as functional seizures, twitches, jerks, pain, etc.) and those of a nervous system in dorsal vagal collapse (such as paralysis, drop-attacks, limb weakness, etc.).
Sympathetic Activation
Happens when the nervous system is in high-alert state (fight or flight).
This may include: functional seizures, tremors or tics, chronic pain
Dorsal Vagal
Occurs when the nervous system “shuts down” into collapse.
This may include: limb weakness, paralysis, or drop attacks.
Ventral Vagal
This is the state of safety, connection, and presence — where we feel calm, engaged, and grounded.
In this state, FND symptoms may lesson or disappear, and we have greater access to regulation and healing.