Somatoform Flashcards

1
Q

Major difference between somatization & conversion disorder

A
  • somatization: complaints of different systems of the body; distressed by their sx
  • conversion: usually only complain of sx from one body systems, they don’t appear to be bothered or are indifferent about them
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2
Q

Major difference between somatization & illness anxiety disorder

A
  • Illness anxiety disorder worries about getting a disease
  • Somatic symptom disorder worries about getting the
  • *worst possible disease**
  • if symptoms of anxiety last longer than 6 months it is typically illness anxiety disorder
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3
Q

Major difference between factitious disorder and malingering

A
  • The presence of a clearly definedable goal or external motivation for their behavior is present in malingering
  • Factitious disorder will consciously produce the symptoms however there is no conscious motivator/secondary gain
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4
Q

Describe the symptoms of somatic disorder

A
  • Patients believe these are real (they are distressing & impairing)
  • 10-15% of PCP visits

(diiferentiates from malingering & facticious)

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5
Q

Somatic Symptom Disorder Specifiers (5)

A
  1. With predominant pain
  2. Persistent (sx for 6 months)
  3. Mild: 1 sx from criteriorn B
  4. Moderate: 2 + sx from criterior B
  5. Severe: 2 + sx from criterion B + multiple somatic complaints (or one very severe one)
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6
Q

Define primary gain

A

Unconscious expression of unacceptable feelings as physical symptoms to avoid facing them

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7
Q

Define secondary gain

A

–Use of symptoms to benefit the individual (attention, avoid or reduce responsibility, financial reward, avoid legal responsibility)

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8
Q

Somatic symptom disorder: cognitive risk factors (3)

A
  1. Sensitization to pain
  2. Heightened attention to bodily Sensations
  3. Attribution of bodily symptoms to possible medical illness
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9
Q

Somatic symptom disorder has a history of _____

A

somatizing in the past

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10
Q

Somatic symptom disorder symptoms persist for _______ (how long).

A

6 months

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11
Q

Somatic symptom disorder: symptoms and treatments become _______.

A

central to their lives

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12
Q

Cultural factors associated with somatic symptom disorder (2).

A
  1. Culture dictates treatment seeking for these issues
  2. Example of idioms of distress: burnout, gas, too much heat in the body, burning of the head
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13
Q

Somatic symptom disorder treatments

A
  1. Antidepressants (SSRI, SNRI, TCA)
  2. CBT
  3. Relaxation techniques

(DO NOT give opioids)

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14
Q

CBT for somatic symptom disorder focuses on :

A
  1. Alleviate rather than eliminate the symptoms
  2. Minimize impairment
  3. Encourage assertiveness and caring for themselves

(you can write in the chart that you provided reassurance; multidisciplinary approach)

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15
Q

Somatic symptom disorder patients may require frequent appointments for _____.

A

Reassurance: it helps them to know that you care by examining them and reassuring them that they are not going to die from anyting in the immediate future

(you may see them once per week until their symptoms decrease. This will also save them from unnecessary ER visits; taxing the healthcare system)

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16
Q

Define illness anxiety disorder

A

Patient expresses anxiety about becoming ill

(impairment is due to fear rather than symptoms- if there are sx, they are mild; this used to be called hypochondriasis)

17
Q

Illness anxiety disorder specifiers

A
  1. Care-seeking type: Medical care, including physician visits or undergoing tests and procedures is frequently used.
  2. Care-Avoidant type: Medical care is rarely used
18
Q

Illness anxiety disorder: general management (3)

A
  1. Frequent chest check-ups until they get better
  2. Have them bring a list of concerns → address each one
  3. How to tune out normal bodily sensations

(essentially: you’re coaching them; be empathetic to fears, do NOT tell them ‘its all in your head’)

19
Q

Illness anxiety disorder treatment

A

Same as somatic symptom disorder + Psychoeducation

(somatic symptoms disorder tx: relaxation tech., meds, CBT)

20
Q

Conversion disorder specifiers: 3 categories

A
  1. Type symptoms
  2. Length: acute/persistent
  3. Stress: with or w/o psychological stress
21
Q

Illness Anxiety Disorder: length of time specifier

A
  1. acute: less than 6 months
  2. persistent: more than 6 months
22
Q

Conversion disorder specifiers : type of symptoms (1st category) (6)

A
  1. Abnormal movement
  2. Attacks or seizures
  3. Anesthesia or sensory loss
  4. Weakness or paralysis
  5. Mixed symptoms
  6. Swallowing symptoms
23
Q

What is the most common kind of conversion disorder

A

Pseudoseizures

(they will display indifference to symptoms)

24
Q

How is conversion disorder established?

A
  1. ruling out other medical or neurological illness
  2. identify psychological factors involved in sx

(pts have difficulty discussing or identifying emotions and feelings; they don’t recognize major stressors)

25
Q

Conversion Disorder treatment (5)

A
  1. Therapy: stress mgmt
  2. Physical therapy (may preserve dignity allow allow conversion sx to dissipate)
  3. Hypnosis
  4. Reassurance
  5. Meds
  6. CBT

(bottom 3 also for the somatic sx disorder and illness anxiety disorder)

26
Q

Which conditions consist of a patient to mimicking physical and emotional illness are amnesia?

A

Factitious disorder and malingering

(Sometimes they don’t know why they’re doing it. It requires a lot of empathy and understanding to treat them)

27
Q

Munchausen syndrome

A

Patients moved from hospital to hospital simulating various illness

28
Q

Munchausen by proxy

A

Parent induces are stimulates illness in his or her child so that the child’s repeatedly hospitalized

(this is child abuse⇒must protect them; both will require psychotherapy)

29
Q

Strategies patient use to feign illness

A
  1. Report symptoms suggesting an illness, without having them
  2. Produce false evidence of an illness
  3. Intentionally produce symptoms of an illness
30
Q

Factitious disorder etiology

A

Emotional deprivation from absent or inattentive parents → patient may recreate nurturing atmosphere from caregivers

31
Q

Which of these disorders is conscious unconscious?

A

Malingering is the only one that is conscious

32
Q

Somatic symptom disorder or anxiety illness disorder are the only ones who _________ (consiously/unconsciously) produce their symptoms.

A

Unconsciously

33
Q

Factitious disorder clues (5)

A
  1. Medical hx does not correspond to the pt’s health & vigor
  2. Textbook clinical presentation
  3. Sophisticated medical vocabulary
  4. Demand specific medications are treatments
  5. Excessive surgical history

(do not jump to conclusions. this is a delicate situation)

34
Q

Factitious disorder treatment (4)

A
  1. Diagnose them (avoid unnecessary procedures)
  2. Legal consultation
  3. Obtain sufficient evidence→ attending physician and Consulting psychiatrist confront patient
  4. Supportive psychotherapy
35
Q

Malingering

A

Intentional production of false or grossly exaggerated physical or psychological symptoms motivated by external incentives

(not a DSM-5 disorder)

36
Q

Motivations for Malingering (2)

A
  1. Avoiding: military conscription or duty, work, ciminal charges
  2. Gain: financial compensation, drugs, better living conditions

(ex: its hot out or cold out and they don’t have shelter, they’ll go to the ER & say they’re suicidal)

37
Q

Malingering Clues (4)

A
  1. Symptoms vague, subjective & unverifiable
  2. Discrepancy between claimed disability & findings
  3. Lack of cooperation (dx & trmt process)
  4. Legal trouble
38
Q

_______ is the most common personality disorder to perpetrate malingering

A

Antisocial personality disorder

39
Q

Malingering treatment

A

No consensus; there is a fine line: confrontation may lead to better deception in the future, the patient is ill may allow for giving up symptoms and response to treatment (they have to play along)