Somatoform disorders - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Somatoform disorders

Description:

Somatoform disorders prof. MUDr. Hana Pape ov , CSc. Department of Psychiatry, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and General University Hospital in Prague – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:48
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: Hana70
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Somatoform disorders


1
Somatoform disorders
  • prof. MUDr. Hana Papežová, CSc.
  • Department of Psychiatry, First Faculty of
    Medicine, Charles University and General
    University Hospital in Prague

2
Characteristics
  • Somatic complains of major medical maladies
    without demonstrable peripheral organ disorder
  • Psychological problems and conflicts are
    important in initiating, exacerbating and
    maintaining the disturbance.
  • Physical and laboratory examinations do not
    explain the vigorous and sincere
    patientscomplaints.
  • The morbid preoccupation interferes with and
    anxiety are frequently present and may justify
    specific treatment

3
Diagnostic guidelinesSomatization disorder
F45.0
  • A definite diagnosis requires the presence of all
    of the following
  • At least 2 years of multiple and variable
    physical symptoms with 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.

4
DSM- IV versus ICD
  • Somatization disorders appeared first in DSM-III.
    Current diagnostic criteria (DSM-IV) are
    simplified and symptoms from each of four
    symptoms group (pain, 2 GIT, 1 sexual symptoms, 1
    pseudoneurological ) are required.
  • Usually diagnosed in the primary care
  • Difficult when the patient forgets (represses) or
    refuses (supresses) medically relevant
    information and critical events.
  • In contrast with current DSM IV the conversion
    disorder is assigned in ICD 10 to the cluster of
    dissociative disorders.

5
Differential diagnosis
  • Medical conditions - multiple sclerosis, brain
    tumour, hyperparathyroidism, hyperthyroidism,
    lupus erythematosus
  • Affective (depressive) and anxiety disorders
  • 1 or 2 symptoms of acute onset and short
    duration
  • Hypochondriasis - patients focus is on fear of
    disease not focus on symptoms
  • Panic disorder - somatic symptoms during panic
    episode only

6
Differential diagnosis
  • Conversion disorder - only one or two
  • Pain disorder - one or two unexplained pain
    complaints, not a lifetime history of multiple
    complaints
  • Delusional disorders - schizophrenia with somatic
    delusions or depressive disorder with
    hypochondriac delusions, bizzare, psychotic sy.
  • Undifferentiated somatization disorder - short
    duration (e.g. less than 2 years) and less
    striking symptoms

7
Course of the illness
  • Chronic relapsing condition, the cause remains
    unknown
  • Onset from in adolescence to the 3th decade of
    life.
  • Psychosocial and emotional distress
  • coincides with the onset of new symptoms and
    health care-seeking behavior
  • Clinical practice showed that typical episodes
    last 6
  • to 9 months with a quiescent time of 9 to 12
    months..

8
Therapy and Prognosis
  • The somatization disorders considerably affects
    social life and working ability of patient.
  • Focus on management than
  • treatment.
  • Management strategies undertaken
  • by primary care

9
Therapy and Prognosis
  • The major importance for successful management
  • Trusting relationship between the patient and one
  • (if possible) primary care physician
  • Frequent changes of doctors are frustrating and
    countertherapeutic.
  • Regularly scheduled visits every 4 or 6 weeks.
  • Brief outpatient visits - performance of at least
    partial physical examination during each visit
    directed at the organ system of complaint.

10
Therapy and Prognosis
  • Understand symptoms as emotional message rather
    than a sing of new disease
  • Avoid more 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 peer support, improvement
    of coping strategies, perception and expression
    of emotions and positive group experience

11
Case history
  • 52yrs, w.f.referred to general internist for
    back pain and multiple other complaints
  • Disabled from her job of machine operator
  • History of 10 operations, in 5 hospitals and 7
    different physicians in last 2 yrs.
  • Physical examination Obese, wearing
    transcutaneous el. nerve stimulation,
    cooperative, shows the various scars with certain
    enthusiasm.

12
Case history
  • Mental status examination
  • Cooperative and pleasant, somewhat seductive, no
    pressure in her speech, euthymic, affect little
    shallow,no problems with discussing of intimate
    details of her life. The remainder of MSE within
    normal limits.
  • Disallowing all back-related symptoms (some
    degeneration of vertebral bodies L2-5 revealed by
    spinal radiographs) positive for 8 pain symptoms
    2 sexual, 4 GIT, 2 pseudoneurological onset at 26
    yrs.
  • Diagnosis of somatization illness made in the
    presence of comorbid medical condition.

13
Somatization disorder undifferentiated F45.1
  • Includes unspecified psychophysiological 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.

14
Hypochondriac disorder F45.2
  • Characterised 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.

15
Diagnostic guidelines
  • A definite diagnosis requires presence of both
    of the following criteria
  • Persistent belief in the presence of at least one
    serious physical illness despite repeated
    negative investigations and examinations or
    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,
    Hypochondriasis, Dysmorphophobia (non
    delusional), Hypochondriacal neurosis, Nosophobia

16
DSM - IV and ICD - 10
  • In DSM IV criteria for hypochondriacal disorder
    are essentially the same as those of ICD-10
  • Since DSM-I
  • In DSM-IV addition of poor insight during the
    current episode

17
Differential diagnosis
  • Ruling out organic disease, usually completed by
    the primary care physician.
  • Somatization disorder - in somatization
    disorder concern about symptoms indifference
    about diseas
  • x
  • the preoccupation with 1 or 2 physical illness
    persistent, no sex differences, no special
    familial context

18
Differential diagnosis
  • Signs of malingering- actually experienced
    symptoms reported rather simulate them.
  • Somatic delusions in psychotic disorders,
    depressive disorder schizophrenia and delusional
    disorders-the more serious disorders.
  • Anxiety and panic disorders-somatic symptoms of
    anxiety sometimes interpreted as signs of serious
    physical illness but the conviction of presence
    of physical illness do not develop.

19
Therapy and prognosis
  • To date no evidence-based treatment has been
    described.
  • The comorbid psychiatric symptom may facilitate
    the referral to psychiatrist and improve
    frequently the hypochondriasis
  • Otherwise 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.

20
Course of the illness
  • The illness is usually long-standing, with
    episodes lasting moths or years.
  • Frequently recurrences occurs after psychosocial
    distress and induce impairment in psychosocial
    functioning and work abilities.
  • that approximately 50 of patients show
    improvement, in other cases a chronic fluctuating
    course remain.
  • 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.

21
Somatoform autonomicdisorder F45.3
  • The somatoform autonomic disorder has been
    similar chronic relapsing condition as the
    somatisation 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.

22
Somatoform pain disorders F45.4
  • Persistent severe and distressing pain that
    cannot be explained fully by a physiological
    process of physical illness.
  • It occurs in association with emotional conflicts
    or psychosocial problems.
  • Chronic pain - a way of seeking human
    relationship, attention and support
  • Sometimes dissipate when an accompanying
    psychiatric disorder is treated.

23
Somatoform pain disorders (2)
  • It has been always difficult to specify to which
    extend the chronic pain is associated with a
    given lesion.
  • The expression of chronic pain may vary with
    different personalities and cultures.
  • It has been clinically accepted that the patient
    is not malingering and the complaints about the
    extend of the pain are to be believed.

24
F50 Eating Disorders
25
SPECTRUM OF EATING DISOREDRS
OBESITY
BULIMIA
RESTRICTING ANOREXIA
BINGE EATING
BING-PURG. ANOREXIA
IMPULSE INHIBITION FOOD RESTRICTION PERFECTIONISM

BODY WEIGHT DRIVE TO EAT IMPULSIVITY
26
Risk Factors in Eating Disorders
  • Environmental
  • media images
  • teasing from peers
  • Family
  • maternal obesity and weight preoccupation
  • psychiatric disorders substance abuse
  • Behavioral
  • personality and psychological factors
  • developmental model

27
Anorexia nervosa F50.0
  • a) Weight is maintained at least 15 below that
    expected (either lost or never achieved) , or
    Quetelets body-mass index is 17,5 or less.
    Prepubertal patients fail to make the expected
    weigh gain during the period of growth.
  • b) The weight loss is self induced by diets,
    avoidance of fatting foods and one or more
    following self-induced vomiting, self induced
    purging, excessive exercise, use of appetite
    suppressant and/or diuretics.
  • c) There is body image distorsion in the form of
    a specific psychopathology with increasing
    emaciation the patients feeling to be too large
    persists and she imposes herself a low weight
    threshold.

28
Anorexia nervosa F50.0
  • Endocrine disorder of hypothalamic-pituitary-gona
    dal axis, amenorhea in women men by lost of
    sexual interest and potency.
  • masked by hormonal replacement therapy
  • Elevated levels of growth hormone, cortisol,
    decrease thyroidal hormone and abnormalities in
    insulin secretion.
  • Prepubertal onset-delayed or stopped development
    on juvenile level (growth, breasts and the
    genitals).

29
Bulimia Nervosa F50.2
  • a)      Persistent preoccupation with eating and
    an irresistible craving for food, the patients
    have the episodes of binge eating during which a
    large amounts of food are consumed in a short
    period of time.
  • b)      The patient attempts to compensate the
    fattening effect of consumed food by one or
    more following behaviour self-induced vomiting,
    abuse of laxatives or diuretics, alternating
    periods of starvation, use of appetite
    suppressants, thyroid hormones or manipulation
    insulin( mainly in diabetic patients).

30
Bulimia Nervosa F50.2
  • c) The psychopathology consists of
  • 1.morbid dread of fatness (the patient set
    herself or himself a sharply defined weight
    threshold below the premorbid weight that
    constitutes the optimum or healthy weight).
  • 2.frequent history of anorexia nervosa, the
    earlier episode may have been fully or mildly
    expressed (mild form with moderate loss of weight
    and/or a transient phase of amenorhea).

31
Eating disorders and the brain
EATING BEHAVIOUR
BRAIN
BODY
32
Anorexia nervosa, Starvation the Brain
AN
PHYSICAL STATE STARVATION
PSYCHICAL DISEASE BRAIN ALTERATION
?
STARVATION
BRAIN ALTERATION
33
Why? nurture does environment matter?
  • perinatal factors
  • family relationships
  • life events

Studies with experimental starvation show that
even healthy not-predisposed people can
experience similar aspects of starvation.
34
Anatomy of CNS Brain atrophy I
Computed Tomography
VENTRICULAR BRAIN RATION
AN (50) BN (50) COPP (50)
Laessle et al 1989
Krieg et al 1989
35
Brain atrophy III
  • WHITE MATTER (myelinated axons, lipids)
  • decreased in acute AN
  • normal after recovery
  • GREY MATTER (neural cell bodies)
  • decreased in acute AN
  • decreased after recovery!!

Katzman 1996, 1997, 2001 Lambe 1997
36
SENSORY IMPUT
INTEGRATION
vision
DORSOLATERAL PREFRONTAL CX IMPULSE INHIBITION
AMYGDALA ASSOCIATIVE LEARNING
VISUAL CORTEX
smell
OLFACTORY CORTEX
HYPOTHALAMUS SENSING ENERGY BALANCE
ORBITOFRONTAL CORTEX DECISION MAKING REWARD VALUE
TASTE CORTEX INSULA FRONTAL OPERCULUM
taste
  • INSULIN
  • LEPTIN
  • GHRELIN
  • BLOOD GLUCOSE

OUTPUT BEHAVIOUR
METABOLIC SIGNALS
37
The role of leptin in malnutrition
  • Circulating leptin levels are in most of the
    malnutrition states decreased in paralelle with
    drop of body fat
  • Hypoleptinemia is rather the consequence than the
    cause of anorexia nervosa and most of the
    malnutrition states
  • Hypoleptinemia triggers complex adaptive response
    to limited energy sources (?body fat). This
    adaptation includes decreased energy expenditure,
    amenorrhea, immunodeficiency etc.

38
Precontemplation
Recovery
MET
Contemplation
Relapse
Preparation
Maintenance
CAT
Stages of Change Model
Action
39
CBT for the eating disorders
  • Making links between behaviour, cognitions and
    affect
  • modifying these in parallel

Cognition (e.g. gaining weight)
Emotions (e.g.anxiety, disgust)
Behaviour (e.g.food avoidance)
40
Prevention
  • Increase knowledge
  • Promote acceptance
  • Diversity puberty
  • Nature of eating d/o
  • Discourage dieting
  • Reduce teasing
  • Media literacy
  • Self acceptance
  • Increase self esteem
  • Coping strategies
  • Reduce body dissatisfaction
  • Healthy eating
  • Limit internalization
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com