Chapter 6 Flashcards
1
Q
somatic symptom disorders
A
- Somatic symptom
- Illness anxiety
- Conversion
o Conversion related
o Factitious disorder – some real, some fake symptoms, rare
o Malingering – faking illness
2
Q
somatic symptom
A
- 1+ somatic symptos
- Often includes: pain, fatigue, nausea, muscle weakness, numbness, indigestion
o Symptoms may or may not have med basis - Significant anxiety related to symptoms – research for hours, take over the counter meds, see many docs
- Sensitivity to pain
- Symptoms cause disruption in life and impairment in other areas
3
Q
illness anxiety
A
- Preoccupation, anxiety, worry about having or acquiring a serious illness
o Serious somatic symptoms absent
o Concern persists despite negative medical findings - Engage in various behaviors related to preoccupation
o Major focus of life and activities
o Frequent checking body, monitoring possible symptoms
o Seeking medical help or information
o Engaging in or avoiding specific activities - Easily alarmed about illness, epidemics
- High alert about symptoms, seeing docs, self diagnosis
- Gets confused with ocd (germophobia) and anxiety disorders
4
Q
conversion
A
- Severe loss of physical functioning, temporary
- Symptoms may include
o Motor deficits: paralysis, localized weakness, difficulty swallowing, seizure or convulsion like behaviors
o Sensory deficits: blinded, double vision, deafness, loss of touch or pain sensation - Appears due to a neurological or medically based condition, but corresponding physical pathology lacking
o Nothing physically wrong with people
o Loss of functioning as psychological process - Tends to happen following severe trauma
5
Q
causes
A
- Somatic symptom and illness anxiety
o Research identified a significant role in anxiety in both
• Compared to anxiety disorders, anxiety expressed differently
• Catastrophic misinterpretation of somatic sensations and symptoms
• Disease conviction - Conversion disorder
o Stress or trauma has been associated with onset
6
Q
integrative biophysical model
A
- Proposes physiological, psychological and social factors interact in a series of vicious cycles
- Unique experiences/patterns result in different disorders
- Factors include
o Physiological factors – unuaual HPA acess, may be related to pain or fatigue
o Cognitive factors
o Personality traits – high levels of suggestibility, tendency to express emotions through symptoms
o Early life experiences – what was learned growing up about being sick, reinforcement for being ill
7
Q
treatment of somatic disorders
A
- Cognitive behavioral therapy helpful
- General goals are
o Restructuring morbid thoughts and preoccupations
o Bringing dysfunctional behavior problems under control
o Strategies to regulate emotions
o Psychcoeducation - Disorder specific goals
o Somatic symptom
• Reduce stress
• Minimize help seeking behaviors
o Illness anxiety
• Identifying/challenging illness related misinterpretations
o Conversion
• Address stress or traumatic event and reduce stress
• Reduce reinforcement or supportive consequences