Dissociative [conversion] disorders - F44 Flashcards

1
Q

What are dissociative disorders?

A

Was once called ‘conversion hysteria’
Partial/complete loss of normal integration between memories of the past, awareness of identity and immediate sensation and loss of bodily movements

Tend to remit after weeks-months, especially if associated with traumatic event; If associated with chronic interpersonal difficulties or other problems – long standing paralyses anaesthesias may develop

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2
Q

What types of symptoms present?

A

Symptoms often represent the patient’s concept of how a physical illness would manifest
Physical examination doesn’t reveal physical illness
LoF is thought to represent an expression of emotional conflicts/needs
Suddenly develops in close relationship to psychological stress
Symptoms included here are only concerned with functions that are usually under conscious control

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3
Q

What disorders come under dissociative disorders?

A
Dissociative: 
Amnesia 
Fugue 
Stupor 
Convulsions 
Anaesthesia and sensory loss 
And Trance and possession disorders
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4
Q

What is dissociative amnesia?

A

Loss of memory, of important recent events, usually partial and selective
Centred around traumatic event
Not due to organic disorder or forgetfulness or fatigue

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5
Q

What is dissociative fugue?

A

Dissociative amnesia + purposeful travel beyond usual everyday range (= a fugue)

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6
Q

What is dissociative stupor?

A

Profound diminution/absence of voluntary movement and normal responsiveness to external stimuli

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7
Q

What are dissociative convulsions?

A

Mimic epileptic seizures closely but tongue biting, bruising from falling, incontinence are rare; consciousness maintained, replaced by trance/stupor

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8
Q

What is dissociative anaesthesia and sensory loss?

A

Areas of skin often have clear boundaries relating to their bodily function rather than medical knowledge
May be differential loss between sensory modalities which cannot be possible from a neurological lesion
Possible complaints of paraesthesia; loss of vision and hearing are rarely total in dissociative disorders

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9
Q

What are trance and possession disorders?

A

Temporary loss of sense of personal identity and full awareness of surroundings
Only those trances that are unwanted/outside of religious and culturally accepted situations

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10
Q

How do you treat dissociative disorders?

A

Watch and wait - lots of feelings of dissociation will pass with time
CBT, DBT and EMDR may help with long standing cases
Antidepressants can help alleviate some symptoms and deal with co-morbid issues

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11
Q

What is dissociative identity disorder (DID)?

A

The presence of two or more identities with distinct patterns of perception and personality which recurrently take sudden control of the person’s behaviour + a retrospective gap in memory of important personal information that exceeds ordinary forgetfulness

Changes in identity not due to substance use or general medical condition

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12
Q

What causes DID?

A

Aetiological controversy:
some proponents argue that it occurs due to significant childhood trauma, as a way for the individual to cope; others argue it is therapist induced - as there are few diagnosable cases in children, the symptoms seem to manifest themselves fully after the exploration of the trauma; patients with DID have been shown to be highly susceptible to suggestion (easily persuaded in the hypnotic like states of therapy); only a small number of therapists responsible for diagnosis etc

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13
Q

What is DID associated with?

A

Multiple other conditions such notably borderline personality disorder as well as mood disorders, substance misuse and PTSD

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14
Q

How do you treat DID?

A

Patient functioning ie around emotional processing, reactions to stress and collateral disorders can be improved with trauma focused psychotherapies but integration into a consistent whole is rare

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15
Q

What is Ganser syndrome?

A

Ex factitious disorder, now dissociative

Nonsensical or wrong answers to questions or doing things incorrectly, other dissociative symptoms such as fugue, amnesia or conversion disorder, often with visual pseudohallucinations and a decreased state of consciousness

Rare but most common in prisons, may be seen to be used to gain benefits

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