Purpose: We describe the psychomotor disadaptation syndrome and report the last findings on its physiopathology and therapeutic. This syndrome was first described by Pr Gaudet's team in 1986 and named "psychomotor regression syndrome". This name has been recently changed into "psychomotor disadaptation syndrome".
Actualities and strong points: The psychomotor disadaptation syndrome is a decompensation of postural function, gait and psychomotor automatisms due to the alteration of the posture and motor programming. That alteration is linked to subcortical-frontal lesions. Clinically, the psychomotor disadaptation syndrome is characterized by postural impairments (retro-propulsion or backward disequilibrium), non-specific gait disorders, neurological signs (akinesia, reactional hypertonia, alteration of both reactive postural responses and protective reactions) and psychological troubles. Psychological troubles include fear of standing and gait in its acute feature or slowness of cognitive processing and anhedonia in its chronic feature. The psychomotor disadaptation syndrome occurs as a failure to compensate for the effects of the following three factors which entail the reduction of motor functional reserves because of their impact on frontal subcortex: 1) aging, 2) chronic illness named predisposing factors (degenerative or vascular disorders) and both 3) functional and organic acute factors. The latter factors cause a reduction of cerebral blood perfusion. The psychomotor disadaptation syndrome requires multidisciplinary management including medical, physiotherapeutic and psychological approaches.
Prospects and projects: In the next years we have to determine the frequency of psychomotor disadaptation syndrome and its physiopathology needs to be further explored.