Somatoform—pt. complains of bodily symptoms that suggest a physical defect or dysfunction, but no phys. basis
Dissociative—disruptions of consciousness, memory, and identity. Individuals with these disorders may be unable to recall events, may forget identity, may assume a new identity.
Preoccupied with fears of a serious disease—not reassured by physician
Preoccupied with fears of a serious disease—not reassured by physician
Overreact to ordinary physical sensations or minor abnormalities—irregular heartbeat, sweating, coughing, sort spot, stomachache
Not faking—sincere
Vague and ambiguous symptoms are common
Causes—
Not well understood
Clearly anxiety related—some researchers like term health anxiety
Attentional bias for illness-related information
Misinterpretations of bodily sensations are seen as causal by cog-beh types
Multiple somatic complaints for which medical attention is sought, but have no apparent physical cause
Most often seen in primary medical care—common complaints include headache, fatigue, abdominal, back and chest pain, genitourinary and sexual symptoms, heart palpitations, gastrointestinal sx, neurological sx
3-10 x more common in women
Usually begins in adolescence
More often in low SES
Lifetime prevalence .2-2% in women, .2% in men
Comorbid with anx disorders
Causes—Similar to hypochondriasis—hyperattentive to bodily sensations
Interaction of personality, cognitive, and learning variables
TX-medical management and cog-beh
Subjectivity of pain
Subjectivity of pain
Diagnosed more commonly in women
Comorbid with anxiety and mood disorders
May allow individuals to avoid some unpleasant activity
TX—cog-beh; relaxation training, support and validation that pain is real; reinforcement of “no pain” behaviors
Symptoms suggest neurological damage, but everything is found to be fine
Symptoms suggest neurological damage, but everything is found to be fine
Usually appear in stressful times. Primary and secondary gain.
So named because energy of a repressed instinct was diverted into sensory-motor channels and blocked functioning. Thus anx and conflict are converted into physical sx
AKA conversion hysteria
La belle indifference in about 20-50% of cases
1-3% of those referred for tx. Prevalence in general pop is very low—may be only about .0005 percent
2-10X more common in women.
Issues in diagnosis—sx do not conform clearly to the particular diseases simulated; selective nature of the dysfunction; sx may go away under hypnosis or narcosis
Distinguishing from malingering and factitious disorder
Malingering—fake an incapacity to avoid responsibility—under voluntary control
Factitious disorder—fake illness to assume role of pt
Preoccupied with an imagined or exaggerated defect in appearance. Often leads to may visits to plastic surgeons. 70% or more of students indicate some dissatisfaction.
Preoccupied with an imagined or exaggerated defect in appearance. Often leads to may visits to plastic surgeons. 70% or more of students indicate some dissatisfaction.
Would you change something about your appearance if you could? 99% of women, 93 % of men say yes
Social and cultural factors play a role.
Most common—skin (73%), hair (56%), nose (37%), stomach (22%), breasts, chest, nipples (21%), eyes (20%)
No official estimates of prevalence. No gender difference. Onset typically in adolescence.
50% comorbid with depression
Over 75% seek non-psych help
Related to OCD—similar brain structures implicated; same tx are effective (SSRIs, cog-beh helps in 50-80%)
Suddenly unable to recall important personal information, usually after a stressful situation.
Suddenly unable to recall important personal information, usually after a stressful situation.
Most often—for all events in a given period of time.