Title: Neurotic Disorders
1Neurotic Disorders
- Department of Psychiatry
- 1st Faculty of Medicine
- Charles University, Prague
- Head Prof. MUDr. Jirà Raboch, DrSc.
2Neurotic Disorders
- Neurotic, stress-related, and somatoform
disorders have common historical origin with the
concept of neurosis and association of a
substantial proportion of these disorders with
psychological causation. - Mixtures of symptoms, especially anxiety and
depressive ones are common in these disorders - About one fourth of the population in developed
countries will suffer from neurotic disorders
during its lifetime course. - With the exception of social phobia their
frequency is higher in women than in men.
3Neurotic, Stress-Related and Somatoform Disorders
(F40-F48)
- F40 Phobic anxiety disorders
- F41 Other anxiety disorders
- F42 Obsessive-compulsive disorder
- F43 Reaction to severe stress, and adjustment
disorders - F44 Dissociative conversion disorders
- F45 Somatoform disorders
- F48 Other neurotic disorders
4F40 Phobic anxiety disorders
- F40 Phobic anxiety disorders
- F40.0 Agoraphobia
- F40.1 Social phobias
- F40.2 Specific (isolated) phobias
- F40.8 Other phobic anxiety disorders
- F40.9 Phobic anxiety disorder, unspecified
5Phobic Anxiety Disorders
- In agoraphobia, social and specific phobias,
anxiety is evoked predominantly by certain
well-defined situations or objects, which are
external to the individual and are not currently
dangerous. - As a result, these situations or objects are
characteristically avoided or endured with dread. - Phobic anxiety fluctuates from mild uneasy to
terror. The individuals concern may focus on
individual symptoms such as palpitations or
feeling faint and is often associated with
secondary fears of dying, losing control, or
going mad. - The anxiety is not relieved by the knowledge that
other people do not regard the situation in
question as dangerous or threatening.
6Agoraphobia
- Agoraphobia - the fear from marketplace.
- Agoraphobia includes various phobias embracing
fears of leaving home fears of entering shops,
crowds, and public places, or of traveling alone
in trains, buses, underground or planes. - The lack of an immediately available exit is one
of the key features of many agoraphobic
situations. - The avoidance behaviour causes sometimes that the
sufferer becomes completely housebound. - Most sufferers are women. Onset - early adult
life. - The lifetime prevalence - between 57.
- High co-morbidity with panic disorder depressive
and obsessional symptoms and social phobias may
be also present.
7Agoraphobia
8Social Phobias
- Clinical picture - fear of scrutiny by other
people in comparatively small groups leading to
avoidance of social situations - The fears may be
- discrete - restricted to eating in public, to be
introduced to other people, to public speaking,
or to encounters with the opposite sex - diffuse - social situations outside the family
circle. - Direct eye-to-eye confrontation may be stressful.
- Low self-esteem and fear of criticism.
- Symptoms may progress to panic attacks.
- Avoidance - almost complete social isolation.
- Usually start in childhood or adolescence.
- Estimation of lifetime prevalence - between 10-13
. - It is equally common in both sexes.
- Secondary alcoholism.
9Social Phobias
10Specific (Isolated) Phobias
- Fears of proximity to particular animals
- spiders (arachnophobia)
- insects (entomophobia)
- snakes (ophidiophobia)
- Fears of specific situations such as
- heights (acrophobia)
- thunder (keraunophobia)
- darkness (nyctophobia)
- closed spaces (claustrophobia)
- Fears of diseases, injuries or medical
examinations - visiting a dentist
- the sight of blood (hemophobia) or injury (pain
odynophobia) - the fear of exposure to venereal diseases
(syphilidophobia) or AIDS-phobia. - Usually arise in childhood or early adult life
and can persist for decades if they remain
untreated. - Lifetime prevalence - between 10-20.
11F41 Other Anxiety Disorders
- F41 Other anxiety disorders
- F41.0 Panic disorder (episodic paroxysmal
anxiety) - F41.1 Generalized anxiety disorder
- F41.2 Mixed anxiety and depressive disorder
- F41.3 Other mixed anxiety disorders
- F41.8 Other specified anxiety disorders
- F41.9 Anxiety disorder, unspecified
12Other Anxiety Disorders
- Manifestations of anxiety are also the major
symptoms of these disorders, however, it is not
restricted to any particular environmental
situation.
13Panic Disorder
- The essential features are recurrent attacks of
severe anxiety (panic attacks) which are not
restricted to any particular situation or set of
circumstances. - Typical symptoms are palpitations, chest pain,
choking sensations, dizziness, and feelings of
unreality (depersonalisation or derealization). - Individual attacks usually last for minutes only.
The frequency of attacks varies substantially. - Frequent and predictable panic attacks produce
fear of being alone or going into public places. - The afflicted persons used to think that they got
a serious somatic disease. - The course of panic disorder is long-lasting and
is complicated with various comorbidities, in
half of the cases with agoraphobia. - The estimation of lifetime prevalence moves
between 1-3.
14Panic Disorder
15General Anxiety Disorder
- The essential feature is anxiety lasting more
than 6 months, which is generalized and
persistent but not restricted to, or even
strongly predominating in, any particular
environmental circumstances. - Symptoms continuous feelings of nervousness,
trembling, muscular tension, sweating,
lightheadedness, palpitations, dizziness, and
epigastric discomfort. - Fears that the patient or a relative will shortly
become ill or have an accident are often
expressed, together with a variety of other
worries and forebodings. - The estimation of lifetime prevalence moves
between 4-6 . - This disorder is more common in women, and often
related to chronic environmental stress. - Its course uses to be fluctuating and chronic
connected with symptoms of frustration, sadness
and complicated with abuse of alcohol and other
illicit drugs.
16Mixed Anxiety and Depressive Disorder
- Symptoms of both anxiety and depression are
present, but neither of symptoms, considered
separately, is sufficiently severe to justify a
diagnosis of depressive episode or specific
anxiety disorder. - Some autonomic symptoms, such as tremor,
palpitations, dry mouth, stomach churning, must
be present. - Individuals with this mixture of comparatively
mild symptoms are frequently seen in primary care.
17Etiology of Anxiety Disorders
- The etiology of anxiety disorders is not exactly
known. - Genetic factors were found to play a role.
- Nongenetic factors, such as various stressful
life events during early or later stages of
ontogenesis were thought to be even more
important. - Several different neurotransmitter systems have
been implicated in these disorders, including the
noradrenergic, GABA, and serotoninergic systems
in some parts of the brain. - The role of CO2 in the etiology of panic disorder
is seriously discussed.
18Clinical Management of Anxiety Disorders
- Treatment of anxiety disorders
- various psychotherapeutic techniques
- cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT)
- psychodynamic approaches
- psychopharmacotherapy
- benzodiazepines (alprazolam, clonazepam) - for
several weeks (potential for abuse, development
of tolerance and addiction) - Buspirone - little abusive potential especially
GAD, not effective in panic disorder longer use
is necessary - beta-blocking drugs - for the short treatment of
performance anxiety, especially somatic symptoms
like tremor - antihistaminics
- various types of antidepressants - SRIs
(clomipramine, citalopram, fluoxetine,
fluvoxamine, paroxetitle, sertraline), MOAIs
(tranylcypromifle), RIMA (moclobemide) and SNRI
(venlafaxine) well tolerated, no abuse potential - Recommendation to start the treatment with a
brief course of benzodiazepines as well as with
antidepressants for a longer period and to
combine the drug treatment with various types of
psychotherapy.
19Commonly Used Anxiolytics
Drug Commonly used dosage (mg) Elimination halftime (hours)
Alprazolam 0,5-6 12-15
Bromazepam 3-15 12
Diazepam 5-30 24-72
Chfordiazepoxied 10-50 24-100
Clobazam 20-30 20
Clonazepam 1-8 34
Clorazepate 15-60 60
Lorazepam 1-4 11-13
Medazepam 10-30 29
Oxazepam 30-90 4-20
Tofizopam 50-300 6
Buspirone 20-30 2-11
Hydroxyzine 300-400 12-20
20F42 Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
- F42 Obsessive-compulsive disorder
- F42.0 Predominantly obsessional thoughts or
ruminations - F42.1 Predominantly compulsive acts (obsessional
rituals) - F42.2 Mixed obsessional thoughts and acts
- F42.8 Other obsessive-compulsive disorders
- F42.9 Obsessive-compulsive disorder, unspecified
21Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
- Obsessional thought are ideas, images or impulses
that enter the individuals mind again and again
in a stereotyped form. - They are recognized as the individuals own
thoughts, even though they are involuntary and
often repugnant. Common obsessions include fears
of contamination, of harming other persons or
sinning against God. - Compulsions are repetitive, purposeful, and
intentional behaviours or mental acts performed
in response to obsessions or according to certain
rule that must be applied rigidly. Compulsions
are meant to neutralize or reduce discomfort or
to prevent a dreaded event or situation. - Autonomic anxiety symptoms are often present.
- There is very frequent comorbidity with
depression (about 80) - suicidal thoughts.
Obsessive-compulsory symptoms may appear in early
stages of schizophrenia. - The life time prevalence 2 - 3. Equally common
in men and women. The course is variable and more
likely to be chronic.
22Etiology of OCD
- The neurobiological model has received widespread
support in the past decade. OCD occurs more often
in persons who have various neurological
disorders, including cases of head trauma,
epilepsy, Sydenhams and Huntingtons chorea. OCD
has also been linked to birth injury, abnormal
EEG findings, abnormal auditory evoked
potentials, growth delays, and abnormalities in
neuropsychological test results. Recently, a type
of OCD has been identified in children after a
group A beta-streptococcal infection. - The most widely studied biochemical model has
focused on the neurotransmitter serotonin because
SRIs are effective in treating patients with OCD.
- Brain imaging studies have provided some evidence
of basal ganglia involvement in persons with OCD.
23Clinical Management
- The treatment of OCD has traditionally been
viewed as difficult and unsatisfactory. Recent
developments have changed this picture
substantially. - Pharmacotherapy
- antidepressants influencing the central
serotoninergic system (clomipramine and SSRIs)
higher doses of the drugs are required to treat
OCD than depression, and response is often
delayed. - Cognitive-behaviour therapy
- Family therapy
- Patient support groups
- Psychosurgery (e.g. stereotactic cingulotomy)
24Epidemiology
Kessler et al., 1995
25F44 Dissociative (Conversion) Disorders
- F44 Dissociative (conversion) disorders
- F44.0 Dissociative amnesia
- F44.1 Dissociative fugue
- F44.2 Dissociative stupor
- F44.3 Trance and possession disorders
- F44.4 Dissociative motor disorders
- F44.5 Dissociative convulsions
- F44.6 Dissociative anaesthesia and sensory loss
- F44.7 Mixed dissociative (conversion) disorders
- F44.8 Other dissociative (conversion) disorders
- F44.9 Dissociative (conversion) disorder,
unspecified
26Dissociative (Conversion) Disorders
- The common theme shared by dissociative disorders
is a partial or complete loss of the normal
integration between memories of the past,
awareness of identity and immediate sensations,
and control of bodily movements. There is
normally a considerable degree of conscious
control over the memories and sensations that can
be selected for immediate attention, and the
movements that are to be carried out. - The term conversion hysteria should be avoided,
because it is confusing and stigmatizing. - The prevalence is not exactly known (up to 10) .
- Sudden onset and termination of dissociative
states. - There are several forms of dissociative syndromes.
27Dissociative Amnesia
- The main feature is loss of memory, usually of
important recent event, which is not due to
organic mental disorder and is too extensive to
be explained by ordinary forgetfulness or
fatigue. - The amnesia is usually centered on traumatic
events, such as accidents, combat experiences, or
unexpected bereavements, and used to be partial
and selective. - The amnesia typically develops suddenly and can
last from minutes to days. - Differential diagnosis complicated it is
necessary to rule out all organic brain disorders
as well as various intoxications. The most
difficult differentiation is from conscious
simulation - malingering.
28Dissociative Stupor
- The individual suffers from diminution or absence
of voluntary movement and normal responsiveness
to external stimuli such as light, noise, and
touch. - The person lies or sits largely motionless for
long periods of time. - Speech and spontaneous and purposeful movement
are completely absent. - Muscle tone, posture, breathing, and sometimes
eye-opening and coordinated eye movements are
such that it is clear that the individual is
neither asleep nor unconscious. - Positive evidence of psychogenic causation in the
form of either recent stressful events or
prominent interpersonal or social problems.
29Trance and Possession Disorders
- There is a temporary loss of both the sense of
personal identity and full awareness of the
surroundings. The individual can act as if taken
over by another personality, spirit, deity, or
force. Repeated sets of extraordinary
movements, postures, and utterances can be
observed.
30Dissociative Disorders of Movement and Sensation
- There is a loss of or interference with movements
or loss of sensations (usually cutaneous). Mild
and transient varieties of these disorders are
often seen in adolescence, particularly in girls,
but the chronic varieties are usually found in
young adults. - Dissociative motor disorders
- Dissociative convulsions
- Dissociative anaesthesia
- Gansers syndrome approximate or grossly
incorrect answers - Multiple personality disorder means the apparent
existence of two or more distinct personalities
within an individual, with only one of them being
evident at a time (Mr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde). Each
personality is complete, with its own memories,
behaviours, and preferences, but neither has
access to the memories of the other and the two
are almost always unaware of each others
existence. Change from one personality to another
is in the first instance usually sudden and
closely associated with traumatic events.
31Clinical Management
- Psychotherapy is a method of choice of treatment
of dissociative disorders (e.g. psychodynamic
programs, hypnosis). - Medications have no proven value with exception
of sodium amobarbital interview.
32F43 Reaction to Severe Stress, and Adjustment
Disorders
- F43 Reaction to severe stress, and adjustment
disorders - F43.0 Acute stress reaction
- F43.1 Post-traumatic stress disorder
- F43.2 Adjustment disorders
- F43.8 Other reactions to severe stress
- F43.9 Reaction to severe stress, unspecified
33Reaction to Severe Stress, and Adjustment
Disorders
- This category differs from others in that it
includes disorders identifiable not only on
grounds of symptomatology and course but also on
the basis of one or other of two - Causative influences
- an exceptionally stressful life event (e.g.
natural or man-made disaster, combat, serious
accident, witnessing the violent death of others,
or being the victim of torture, terrorism, rape,
or other crime) producing an acute stress
reaction - significant life change leading to continued
unpleasant circumstances that result in an
adjustment disorder - Stressful event is thought to be the primary and
overriding causal factor, and the disorder would
not have occurred without its impact.
34Acute Stress Reaction
- A transient disorder of significant severity,
which develops in an individual without any
previous mental disorder in response to
exceptional physical and/or psychological stress.
- Not all people exposed to the same stressful
event develop the disorder. - The symptoms an initial state of daze, with
some constriction of the field of consciousness
and narrowing of attention, inability to
comprehend stimuli, and disorientation. This
state may be followed either by further
withdrawal from the surrounding situation
(extreme variant - dissociative stupor), or by
agitation and overactivity. - Autonomic signs - tachycardia, sweating or
flushing, as well as other anxiety or depressive
symptoms. - The symptoms usually appear within minutes of the
impact of the stressful event, and disappear
within several hours, maximally 23 days.
35Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
- PTSD is a delayed and/or protracted response to a
stressful event of an exceptionally threatening
or catastrophic nature. - The three major elements of PTSD include
- reexperiencing the trauma through dreams or
recurrent and intrusive thoughts (flashbacks) - showing emotional numbing such as feeling
detached from others - having symptoms of autonomic hyperarousal such as
irritability and exaggerated startle response,
insomnia - Commonly there is fear and avoidance of cues that
remind the sufferer of the original trauma.
Anxiety and depression are commonly associated
with the above symptoms. Excessive use of alcohol
and drugs may be a complicating factor. - The onset follows the trauma with a latency
period, which may range from several weeks to
months, but rarely more than half a year. - The lifetime prevalence is estimated at about
0.5 in men and 1.2 in women.
36Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
37Clinical Management
- Pharmacological approach
- antidepressant medication
- short-term benzodiazepines trials
- mood stabilizers (carbamazepine, valproate)
- antipsychotics
- Psychotherapy is also of importance - CBT using
education and exposure techniques - Group therapy, family therapy and self-help
groups are widely recommended.
38Adjustment Disorders
- Adjustment disorder comprises states of
subjective distress and emotional disturbance
arising in the period of adaptation to a
significant life change or to the consequences of
a stressful life event, such as serious physical
illness, bereavement or separation, migration or
refugee status. - The clinical picture depressed mood, anxiety,
worry, a feeling of inability to cope, plan
ahead, or continue in the present situation, and
some degress of disability in the performance of
daily routine. - Onset - within 1 month duration - below 6
months. - More frequently women, unmarried and young
persons. - Psychotherapy is the first line treatment of this
disorder. Symptomatic treatment may comprise
short trial of hypnotics or benzodiazepines.
39F45 Somatoform Disorders
- F45 Somatoform disorders
- F45.0 Somatization disorder
- F45.1 Undifferentiated somatoform disorder
- F45.2 Hypochondriacal disorder
- F45.3 Somatoform autonomic dysfunction
- F45.4 Persistent somatoform pain disorder
- F45.8 Other somatoform disorders
- F45.9 Somatoform disorder, unspecified
40F45 Somatoform Disorders
- Somatoform disorders - multiple, recurrent and
frequent somatic complaints requiring medical
attention without association with any physical
disorder are prominent. - The medical history of multiple contacts with
primary care and specialized health services is
typical before the patient is referred to
psychiatric care. - Characteristics of somatoform disorders
- somatic complains of many medical maladies
without association with serious demonstrable
peripheral organ disorder - psychological problems and conflicts that are
important in initiating, exacerbating and
maintaining the disturbance
41F45.0 Somatization DisorderDiagnostic Guidelines
- A definite diagnosis requires the presence of all
of the following - at least 2 years of multiple and variable
physical symptoms for which no adequate physical
explanation has been found, - persistent refusal to accept the advice or
reassurance of several doctors that there is no
physical explanation for the symptoms, - some degree of impairment of social and family
functioning attributable to the nature of
symptoms and resulting behavior.
42F45.0 Somatization DisorderDifferential Diagnosis
- Medical conditions may be confused with
somatoform disorder especially early in their
course (multiple sclerosis, brain tumor,
hyperparathyroidism, hyperthyroidism, lupus
erythematosus). - Further investigation or consultation should be
considered in long-term somatization disorder if
there is a shift in the emphasis or stability of
the physical complaints. This change in symptoms
suggests possible development of physical
disease. - Affective (depressive) and anxiety disorders
accompany somatization disorders but need not be
specified separately unless they are sufficiently
marked and persistent.
43F45.0 Somatization DisorderTherapy and Prognosis
- Chronic relapsing condition starting in
adolescence or even as late as the third decade
of life. - New symptoms during the emotional distress.
- Typical episodes last 6 to 9 months quiescent
time of 9 to 12 months. - Management strategies
- the trusting relationship between the patient and
one (if possible) primary care physician - set up regularly scheduled visits every 4 or 6
weeks - keep outpatient visits brief-perform at least a
partial physical examination during each visit
directed at the organ system of complaint - understand symptoms as emotional message rather
than a sing of new disease, look for signs of
disease rather than focus on symptom - avoid diagnostic tests, laboratory evaluations
and operative procedures unless clearly indicated
- set a goal to get selected somatization patients
referral- ready for mental health care - Group therapy (time limited, behavior oriented
and structured group).
44F45.1 Undifferentiated Somatoform Disorder
- The diagnosis should be considered if the
complete and typical clinical picture of
somatization disorders has not been fulfilled. - No physical basis of the symptoms presented
remains the basis for the diagnosis. - Differential diagnosis
- frequently occur in major depression and
schizophrenia. - chronic history of multiple somatic complaints
- begin before the age of 30
- adjustment disorder with unexplained somatic
complaints should last by definition less than 6
moths - Therapy and prognosis
- chronic and relapsing but some cases experience
only one episode - treatment approaches as in somatization disorder
45F45.2 Hypochondriacal Disorder
- The disorder is characterized by a persistent
preoccupation and a fear of developing or having
one or more serious and progressive physical
disorders. - Patients persistently complain of physical
problems or are persistently preoccupied with
their physical appearance. - The fear is based on the misinterpretation of
physical signs and sensations. - Physician physical examination does not reveal
any physical disorder, but the fear and
convictions persist despite the reassurance.
46F45.2 Hypochondriacal DisorderDiagnostic
Guidelines
- Presence of both of the following criteria
- persistent belief in the presence of at least one
serious physical illness underlying the
presenting symptom or symptoms, even thought
repeated investigations and examinations have not
identified any adequate physical explanation, or
a persistent preoccupation with presumed
deformity or disfigurement - persistent refusal to accept the advice and
reassurance of several different doctors that
there is no physical illness or abnormity
underlying the symptoms - Includes Body dysmorphic disorder,
Dysmorphophobia (non delusional), Hypochondriacal
neurosis, Hypochondriasis, Nosophobia
47F45.2 Hypochondriacal Disorder Differential
Diagnosis
- Basic - ruling out underlying organic disease.
- The main somatoform disorder that need to be
differentiated from hypochondriasis is
somatization disorder. - Hypochondriasis needs to be distinguished from
factitious disorder with predominantly physical
signs and from malingering.
48F45.2 Hypochondriacal Disorder Therapy and
Prognosis
- The illness is usually long-standing, with
episodes lasting months or years. Recurrences
occur frequently after psychosocial distress. - Higher socio-economic status, presence of other
treatable condition, anxiety and depression, an
acute onset, absence of personality disorder or
comorbid organic disease predict better outcome. - No evidence-based treatment has been described.
- Patients strongly refuse the mental health care
professionals and remain in primary health care. - Similar management and group therapy strategy as
in somatization disorder may be useful.
49F45.3 Somatoform Autonomic Dysfunction
- The symptoms are presented as physical disorder
of system or organ largely or completely under
controlled by autonomic innervation, i.e. the
cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, or respiratory
system and some aspects of genitourinary system. - The symptoms are usually of two types
- complaints based on objective signs of autonomic
arousal (palpitation, sweating, flushing, tremor) - idiosyncratic, subjective, non-specific (fleeting
aches and pains, burning, heaviness, tightness,
sensation of being bloated or distended) - These symptoms patients refer to a specific organ
or system. - In many cases there is evidence of psychological
stress or current problems related to the
disorder.
50F45.3 Somatoform Autonomic Dysfunction
Diagnostic Guidelines
- Symptoms of autonomic arousal such as
palpitations, sweating, tremor, flushing which
are troublesome and persistent - Additional subjective symptoms referred to
specific organ or system - Preoccupation with the symptoms and possibility
of serious (often non specified disorder). It
does not respond to repeated explanations and
reassurance of physicians - No evidence of a significant disturbance of
structure or function of the system or organ
51F45.3 Somatoform Autonomic Dysfunction
Differential Diagnosis
- In comparison with generalized anxiety there is
predominance of psychological component of
autonomic arousal. In somatization disorders
autonomic symptoms when they are present they are
nor prominent nor persistent and symptoms are not
so persistently attributed to one organ or
system. - Excludes psychological and behavioural factors
associated with disorders or diseases classified
elsewhere (F54). - The individual disorder may be classified by
fifth character indicating the organ or system
affected
52F45.3 Somatoform Autonomic Dysfunction Therapy
and Prognosis
- Similar chronic relapsing condition as the
somatization disorder. - Patients report worse health than do those with
chronic medical condition and their report of
specific symptoms if they meet the severity
criteria is sufficient and need not to be
considered legitimate by the clinician. - Treatment strategies will be similar stressing
the importance of the interdisciplinary
collaboration.
53F45.4 Persistent Somatoform Pain Disorder
- The predominant symptom is a persistent severe
and distressing pain that cannot be explained
fully by a physiological process of physical
illness. - Pain occurs in association with emotional
conflicts or psychosocial problems. - The expression of chronic pain may vary with
different personalities and cultures. - The patient is not malingering and the complaints
about the intensity of the pain are to be
believed.
54F45.4 Persistent Somatoform Pain Diagnostic
Guidelines
- The clinical examination should focus on
- the extend the patient is disabled by the pain
- the degree of complicating emotional factors and
comorbid psychiatric conditions - Includes psychalgia, psychogenic backache or
headache, somatoform pain disorder.
55F45.4 Persistent Somatoform PainDifferential
Diagnosis
- Not included
- pain presumed to be of psychological origin
occurring during the course of depression or
schizophrenia - pain due to known or inferred physiological
mechanism such as muscle tension pain or migraine
but still believed to have psychological cause
are coded as P54 - the somatoform pain disorder has to be
differentiated from histrionic behaviour in
reaction to organic pain - Excluded backache NOS (M54.9), pain NOS (acute,
chronic) (R52.-), tension type headache (G44.2).
56F45.4 Persistent Somatoform PainTherapy and
prognosis
- Once diagnosis is completed the outpatient
treatment on regular basis by one interested
physician has to be carried out. - Patients have to be reassured that the treatment
continues if there is some improvement. - Those with pain-prone reaction to distress are
described to have poor or transient improvement. - Patients with comorbid depression may improve
with antidepressant medication. - Treatment with any type of the pain disorder
subtypes needs to be multidisciplinary and
multidimensional from the onset.
57F45.8 Other Somatoform Disorders
- In these disorders the presented complaints are
not mediated through the autonomic nervous, and
are limited to specific system of body part. - Any other disorders of sensation not due to
physical disorders which are closely associated
in time with stressful event or problem and which
results in significant increase of attention for
the patient, personal or medical care should also
be classified here. - Swelling, movement on the skin and paraesthesias
(tingling or/and numbness) are common. - Disorders included in this category
- globus hystericus
- psychogenic torticollis and other disorders of
spasmodic movement (excluding Tourettes
syndrome) - psychogenic pruritus but excluding specific skin
lesions such as alopecia, dermatitis eczema, or
urticaria of psychogenic origin
58F45.9 Somatoform Disorder, Unspecified
- Includes unspecified physiological or
psychosomatic disorder in patients whose symptoms
and associated disability do not fit the full
criteria for other somatoform disorders. The
treatment and the outcome however do not
considerably differ.
59Other Neurotic Disorders
- F48 Other neurotic disorders
- F48.0 Neurasthenia
- F48.1 Depersonalization-derealization syndrome
- F48.8 Other specified neurotic disorders
- F48.9 Neurotic disorder, unspecified