# Sustained shoulder elevation posture: an under-recognized functional movement disorder phenotype

**Authors:** Alberto Albanese, Luigi M Romito, Paolo Amami, Daniela Calandrella, Tiziana De Santis

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf454 · 2025-11-24

## TL;DR

This paper describes a rare movement disorder characterized by sustained shoulder elevation, often linked to minor trauma and unresponsive to common treatments.

## Contribution

The paper systematically identifies and characterizes a novel functional movement disorder phenotype with sustained shoulder elevation.

## Key findings

- Six patients showed sustained shoulder elevation with no alleviating maneuvers or overflow phenomena.
- Most cases were preceded by minor trauma and showed poor response to medications or botulinum neurotoxin.
- Literature review found 75 similar cases, 75% of which were linked to minor traumatic injury.

## Abstract

Patients with sustained shoulder elevation postures were observed over time in our movement disorders clinic and occasionally reported in literature as variants of dystonia or post-traumatic movement disorders. We retrospectively assessed the clinical records of patients in our movement disorders registry with sustained or fixed shoulder elevation. Their clinical phenomenology, response to treatment and precipitants were investigated. The patients underwent neurophysiologic, genetic and neuropsychologic tests. A PubMed search of cases with similar presentation was performed. Six patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Their phenomenology showed a sustained postural abnormality with elevation of one shoulder that often involves neighbouring regions; pain was a common accompanying feature; there were no alleviating manoeuvres, mirror or overflow phenomena. A recent preceding local trauma was reported by two patients; the onset was acute or gradual, progression was stable after initial worsening. There was poor benefit from oral medications; botulinum neurotoxin treatment improved pain and had little influence on postural abnormalities. Deep brain stimulation was ineffective in one patient; motor cortex stimulation caused partial or temporary improvement in two. All the patients received a diagnosis of functional movement disorder and met diagnostic criteria for functional neurological symptom (conversion) disorder with abnormal movements. The search strategies identified 19 publications reporting 75 similar cases, 75% of which were preceded by a minor traumatic injury. The motor abnormality responded poorly to oral medications, botulinum neurotoxin or physical therapy. We expand here on a peculiar phenomenology of sustained or fixed shoulder elevation that represents a recognizable syndrome with diagnostic and prognostic implications.

Albanese et al. report on a peculiar and rare phenotype observed in a tertiary movement disorders centre. The patients presented a functional movement disorder with sustained shoulder elevation posture, frequent pain, and no identifiable cause. Similar cases have been occasionally reported. Here the authors consistently systematize earlier and new observations.

Graphical Abstract

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** functional movement disorder (MONDO:0002104), conversion disorder (MONDO:0002104)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pain (MESH:D010146), motor abnormality (MESH:D000014), neurological symptom (conversion) disorder (MESH:D003291), postural abnormalities (MESH:D054972), trauma (MESH:D014947), movement disorder (MESH:D009069), dystonia (MESH:D004421), abnormal movements (MESH:D004409)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12836432/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12836432