# Sleep in Functional Motor Disorders: A Case–Control Polysomnographic Study

**Authors:** Jiří Nepožitek, Simona Dostálová, Martin Jirásek, Gabriela Chaloupková, Zuzana Forejtová, Lucia Nováková, Veronika Rottová, Veronika Konvičná, Karel Šonka, Mark J. Edwards, Tereza Serranová

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/jsr.70163 · 2025-07-31

## TL;DR

This study finds that people with functional motor disorders have significant sleep issues and higher rates of sleep disorders compared to healthy individuals.

## Contribution

The study is the first polysomnographic investigation of sleep in functional motor disorders, revealing specific sleep abnormalities and their links to mood symptoms.

## Key findings

- FMD patients had higher rates of restless legs syndrome, obstructive sleep apnoea, and periodic limb movements in sleep.
- FMD patients reported worse sleep quality, higher sleepiness, depression, and anxiety compared to controls.
- Polysomnography revealed altered sleep structure in FMD, including changes in REM sleep latency and sleep efficiency.

## Abstract

Sleep problems are frequent in functional motor disorders (FMDs). Surprisingly, objective correlates of impaired sleep and its relationship to other comorbidities have been understudied, and no polysomnographic study is available. We aimed to map the polysomnographic parameters in the context of self‐reported sleep and mood symptoms and search for comorbid sleep disorders in FMD and healthy controls. Thirty‐seven patients (mean age [SD], 48.2 [10.6] years) with clinically definite FMD and 37 controls (48.6 [11.2] years) underwent structured medical and sleep history assessment, neurological examination and polysomnography and completed questionnaires for sleep quality, sleepiness, depression and anxiety. In FMD, specific sleep disorders were identified in our cohort, with 32% having restless legs syndrome, 38% clinically significant obstructive sleep apnoea and 8% periodic limb movements in sleep. FMD patients reported worse sleep quality (p < 0.001), higher sleepiness (p < 0.001), depression (p < 0.001) and anxiety (p < 0.001), had longer REM sleep latency (p < 0.001), worse sleep efficiency (p = 0.012) and increased wake ratio (p = 0.013). Furthermore, longer sleep latency (p = 0.030) and decreased REM sleep ratio (p = 0.027) in FMD reached nominal significance before adjustment for multiple comparisons. In FMD, subjective sleep quality positively correlated with depression (ρ = 0.54; p < 0.002) and anxiety (ρ = 0.61; p < 0.001) and subjective sleepiness correlated with depression (ρ = 0.42; p = 0.010). Self‐reported measures did not correlate with any polysomnographic parameters. Polysomnography detected sleep structure changes in FMD. Sleep abnormalities, including impairments in REM sleep, should be considered in the management of FMD. Future studies should further explore the role of REM sleep disturbances in the pathophysiology of FMD.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** restless legs syndrome (MONDO:0005391)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** restless legs syndrome (MESH:D012148), mood (MESH:D019964), FMD (MESH:C536391), obstructive sleep apnoea (MESH:D020181), anxiety (MESH:D001007), depression (MESH:D003866), periodic limb movements (MESH:D020189), sleepiness (MESH:D000077260), REM sleep disturbances (MESH:D020187), Sleep abnormalities (MESH:D012893), FMDs (MESH:D003291)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13003293