Background: Functional Neurological Disorder (FND) is a common and disabling condition at the interface of neurology and psychiatry, characterized by motor, sensory, seizure-like, or cognitive symptoms that are incongruent with recognized neurological disease but associated with substantial impairment. Despite its frequency and marked female predominance, FND remains underdiagnosed and often misunderstood. Methods: This narrative review synthesizes evidence from neurobiological, biomarker, and treatment studies, with attention to predictive coding, salience network dysfunction, impaired sense of agency, stress-related mechanisms, and sex- and gender-related vulnerability. Results: Current evidence supports a model of FND as a disorder of distributed brain network dysfunction involving abnormal interactions among salience, limbic, motor, and self-monitoring systems. Predictive coding and impaired agency models provide clinically useful frameworks for understanding symptom generation, although they remain mechanistic hypotheses rather than definitive causal explanations. Candidate biomarkers, including functional connectivity alterations, autonomic dysregulation, and HPA axis measures, offer pathophysiological insight but remain insufficiently validated for routine diagnosis. Female predominance likely reflects interacting biological, psychological, and sociocultural mechanisms rather than a single neuroendocrine pathway. Conclusions: This review contributes an integrated, clinically oriented framework linking neurobiology, biomarkers, sex/gender vulnerability, and treatment in FND. Current evidence supports multidisciplinary care combining diagnostic communication, specialized physiotherapy, psychotherapy, and coordinated follow-up, while future research should prioritize standardized phenotyping, longitudinal designs, and multimodal biomarker validation.
Marano et al. (Tue,) studied this question.