1 / 14

Somatoform disorders

Somatoform disorders Somatization and Conversion Pain and Hypochondriasis Body Dysmorphic Disorder Somatoform symptoms Symptoms suggest a physical disorder Symptoms cannot adequately be explained physiologically Symptoms are often (but not always) described in dramatic ways

issac
Télécharger la présentation

Somatoform disorders

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Somatoform disorders Somatization and Conversion Pain and Hypochondriasis Body Dysmorphic Disorder

  2. Somatoform symptoms • Symptoms suggest a physical disorder • Symptoms cannot adequately be explained physiologically • Symptoms are often (but not always) described in dramatic ways • Other disorders, such as anxiety disorders, mood disorders, and personality disorders, often co-exist

  3. Somatization Disorder (Briquet’s syndrome) • Many physical complaints • Beginning before age 30 • Must include • Four different pains • Two gastrointestinal symptoms • One sexual symptom • One pseudoneurological symptom • Symptoms are unfounded or exaggerated

  4. Conversion Disorder • Physical symptoms suggesting neurological problems • Sensory impairment: Any modality • Paresthesias and paralysis (demonstrate) • Sudden onset, sudden termination, sudden reappearance • Mostly women; men in combat • Often misdiagnosed: Overpathologized • La belle indifference: 1/3 of cases

  5. Pain Disorder • Main symptom is pain • May be exacerbated by psychosocial factors • May be maintained by gain: Eugene • Primary gain • Secondary gain

  6. Hypochondriasis • No physical symptoms are necessary • Preoccupied with the possibility that normal sensations are symptoms of serious disease • Frequent visits to physicians • Persists despite medical reassurance • Over-report bodily sensations

  7. Body Dysmorphic Disorder • Excessive concern with real or imagined defects in appearance, especially facial marks or features. • Frequent visits to plastic surgeons • Culturally-influenced, but not culture-bound • May be a symptom of more pervasive disorders: Obsessive-compulsive or delusional disorder, for example.

  8. Do advertisements affect BDD? “Your nose is central to the way you feel about your appearance and the way other people first perceive you. “If you are in the slightest way unhappy about it, and feel it detracts from your looks, you will probably always be unhappy about it.”

  9. Can you see the difference? • “Once upon a time there was a young lady who had a small problem. She didn’t like her nose…” • What might be the influence of shows like The Swan (Fox), Extreme Makeover (ABC), I Want a Famous Face (MTV), or Dr. 90210 (E!)? • Are pretty and handsome synonymous with attractive?

  10. More somatoform-like disorders • Malingering • Factitious disorder • Personal: Symptoms only when observed • By proxy (NOS) • Undifferentiated Somatoform Disorder • Somatoform Disorder NOS • Pseudocyesis (no everted umbilicus) • Hypochondriacal symptoms < 6 months

  11. Etiology of somatoform disorders • Psychoanalytic theory • Controlling repressed sexual urges • Displaced anxiety or secondary gain • Sackeim: Deny knowledge but use information • Behavior theory • Malingering • Social learning and reinforcement • Secondary gain: Celia

  12. More etiology • Biological factors • One sign (objective indicator) of anxiety is an increased level of cortisol, a stress hormone. Cortisol levels are elevated in patients with somatization disorder. • But there is no concordance in twin studies for any somatoform disorder. • The right hemisphere may be implicated in conversion disorder, symptoms of which are more likely in the left half of the body. The right hemisphere is involved in emotional experience and expression.

  13. Theodor & Mandelcorn’ vision test (1973): Tunnel vision

  14. Grosz & Zimmerman (1970): Celia “I can’t see to read!”

More Related