TY - JOUR T1 - Soft signs in movement disorders: friends or foes? JF - Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry JO - J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry SP - 961 LP - 962 DO - 10.1136/jnnp-2018-318455 VL - 90 IS - 8 AU - Conor Fearon AU - Alberto J Espay AU - Anthony E Lang AU - Timothy Lynch AU - Davide Martino AU - Francesca Morgante AU - Niall P Quinn AU - Marie Vidailhet AU - Alfonso Fasano Y1 - 2019/08/01 UR - http://jnnp.bmj.com/content/90/8/961.abstract N2 - In movement disorders, emphasis on pure phenomenology to make diagnoses can lead to significant variability and diagnostic disagreement.1 2 This is illustrated by difficulty among experts in deciding whether possibly equivocal signs (‘soft’ signs) are present or absent. A tight pen grip, slightly asymmetric arm swing, or hyperextended fingers may be judged by some to be within the broad spectrum of normal. Others may consider such signs to be pathological. Hence, the relevance of such signs can be uncertain. Furthermore, we are often asked to judge on the presence and clinical relevance of soft signs in ‘neurologically healthy’ individuals and this can be challenging (eg, in clinical genetic studies). Although classification systems tend to include clinical signs to define boundaries of disease, the relevance of soft signs may be questionable if inter-rater reliability is variable.Initially introduced in the psychiatric literature,3 the term ‘soft signs’ has also recently been applied to movement disorders. In the recent Consensus Statement on the Classification of Tremor, the detection of soft signs has, for the first time, become an integral part of tremor classification.4 Because of the uncertainty surrounding the interpretation of soft signs, we asked movement disorders experts (MDE) and experts in fields other than movement disorders (non-MDE) to rate videos of patients and healthy control subjects to assess inter-rater reliability on the presence or absence of soft signs.We asked seven MDE (AJE, AEL, TL, DM, FM, NPQ, MV) and six non-MDE (listed in the Acknowledgements section) to rate 30 videos for the presence or absence of soft signs. Raters were advised that videos may feature control subjects or patients, but no other clinical information was provided. Twenty-five control subjects were recorded (9 … ER -