Title: Somatoform Disorders
1Somatoform Disorders
- Jason Rosenstock, M.D.
- March 14, 2002
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5Somatoform Disorders Agenda
- Goals/Objectives
- Key Common Features
- Somatization Disorder
- Differential Diagnosis
- Comorbidity
- Etiology
- Physician Reaction
- Management Strategies
- Other Somatoform Disorders
- Conclusion
6Somatoform Disorders Goal
- To make students familiar with the concept of
somatization, the presentation of somatoform
disorders in outpatient practices, and principles
of treatment in primary care.
7Somatoform Disorders Objectives
- The student will be able to
- State the clinical characteristics of somatoform
disorders - Discuss medical and psychiatric comorbidity
common in patients with somatoform disorders - Compare and contrast somatoform disorders with
malingering and factitious disorder - Explain why psychological distress can manifest
as somatization - Discuss difficulties physicians may have with
somatoform patients - Summarize management strategies for patients with
somatoform disorders
8Somatoform Disorders Key Common Features
- Phenomenology
- Physical symptoms that are suggestive of, but
cant be fully explained by, medical findings or
physiological mechanisms
9Somatoform Disorders Key Common Features
- Pathogenesis
- Behavioral disturbance in which people speak not
with words or feeling but with their bodies
10Somatoform Disorders Key Common Features
- Epidemiology
- usually with a female preponderance
- occuring frequently in a primary care setting
- high psychiatric and medical comorbidity
- onset in adolescence or early adulthood, usually
with a chronic course
11Somatoform Disorders Key Common Features
- Outcomes
- difficult to diagnose
- difficult to treat
- causes significant distress and functional
decline
12Somatoform Disorders
- Somatization Disorder
- Hypochondriasis
- Conversion Disorder
- Body Dysmorphic Disorder
- Pain Disorder
- Undifferentiated Somatoform Disorder
13Somatoform Disorders Somatization Disorder
- Diagnostic Criteria
- 1. History onset before 30yo, symptoms lasting
years, decline in function or pursuit of medical
treatment - 2. Symptoms all four of the following
- a. Pain (four sites)
- b. Gastrointestinal (two non-pain symptoms)
- c. Sexual (one non-pain symptom)
- d. Neurological (one non-pain symptom)
- 3. Medical explanations inadequate
- 4. Rule out other conditions
14Somatoform Disorders Somatization Disorder
- Epidemiology
- FgtM
- Lower SEC/education
- Ruralgturban
- H/o childhood sexual abuse
- FH
- males w/alcoholism/antisocial personality
- females w/somatization d/o
- Comorbidity Histrionic Personality D/o
15Somatoform Disorders
- Etiology 1?
- Amplification of bodily sensations
- Altered cognitive schema (somatic filter)
- negative misinterpretations of physical
sensations - anxiety from automatic negative thoughts
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17Somatoform Disorders
- Etiology 2?
- Need for Sick Role
- frequent inability of somatizing patients to
express concerns in any other way than by being
physically sick
18Somatoform Disorders
- Etiologies 3-9?
- unconscious psychological conflict
- hysterical identification
- social learning
- cross-cultural
- primary/secondary gain
- genetic
- neurodevelopmental
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21Somatoform DisordersDifferential Diagnosis
- other somatoform disorders
- factitious/malingering
- psychiatric (mood, anxiety, psychotic,
personality, dissociative) - general medical
- substance-induced
- cultural
22Somatoform Disorders Differential Diagnosis
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24Somatoform DisordersComorbidity
- Personality disorders
- secondary depression
- secondary anxiety
- general medical
- substance-induced
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26Somatoform DisordersPresenting the Diagnosis
- Physician Its all in your head
- Patient But its NOT in my head its in
my stomach!
27Somatoform DisordersPresenting the Diagnosis
- summarizing signs/sx
- good news
- bad news
- seek psychiatrist
- not crazy
- power of suggestion
28Somatoform DisordersManagement Strategies
- Overall goals
- realistic treatment plan (sx reduction)
- shift focus from body to person
- insure good communication across treatment
providers - manage countertransference
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30Somatoform DisordersManagement Strategies
- Managing appointments
- regular, brief follow-up
- healthy, supportive relationship
- briefer exams, more talk
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32Somatoform DisordersManagement Strategies
- What to say
- reinforce non-complaining behaviors
- reassure
- be empathic
33Somatoform DisordersManagement Strategies
- What to do/not do
- limit work-up
- intervene with benign, time-limited measures
- treat comorbidity if present
- psychotherapy (group/individual)
- skills relaxation, stress management, etc.
- psychotropic medication
- complementary treatments
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35Somatoform Disorders Conversion Disorder
- Diagnostic Criteria
- 1. Unexplained symptoms of voluntary motor or
sensory function - 2. Associated psychological factors
- 3. Significant distress or functional decline
- 4. Not merely pain or sexual dysfunction
- 5. Rule out other conditions
36Somatoform Disorders Conversion Disorder
- Epidemiology
- Prevalence 10-300100K
- 15 have conversion sx at times
- 1-3 of o/p psych referrals
- 5-15 of psych consults
- 4 of neuro o/p visits
- onset 10-35yo
- FgtM 2-101
- Esp. rural, low SEC, medically naïve
37Somatoform Disorders Conversion Disorder
- Course
- many remit within 2 weeks
- 25 recur within 1st year
- 50 sx-free at 1 year
- 80 sx-free at 5 and 15 years
38Somatoform Disorders Conversion Disorder
- Prognosis good signs if
- acute onset
- clear precipitant
- early treatment
- intelligence
- good social environment
- no comorbidity (psychiatric/medical)
39Somatoform Disorders Hypochondriasis
- Diagnostic Criteria
- 1. Preoccupation with fears of having a serious
disease, triggered by misinterpreted body
sensations - 2. Occurs despite reassurance
- 3. Significant distress or functional decline
- 4. gt6mo duration
- 5. Rule out other conditions
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41Somatoform Disorders Hypochondriasis
- Epidemiology
- 4-9 prevalence in primary care settings
- MgtF generally
- Low SEC
- FH
- Variable age of onset but generally peak sx occur
in 30s/40s
42Somatoform Disorders Hypochondriasis
- Prognosis good signs if
- acute onset
- high-functioning, high SEC
- comorbid medical or Axis I dx present
- Axis II absent
- no secondary gain
43Somatoform Disorders BDD
- Diagnostic Criteria
- 1. Preoccupation with imagined defect (or
excessive concern with minor defect) - 2. Significant distress or functional decline
- 3. Rule out other conditions
44Somatoform Disorders Pain Disorder
- Diagnostic Criteria
- 1. Pain (unexplained, or greater than would be
expected) - 2. Psychological factors important
- 3. Significant distress or functional decline
- 4. Rule out other conditions
45Somatoform DisordersPain Disorder
- Epidemiology
- 40 prevalence in chronic pain populations
- FgtM 21
- FH depression, EtOH, pain
- Low SEC
- Older age of onset 30-40yo