Title: Medically Unexplained Symptoms
1Medically Unexplained Symptoms
- Adrian Flynn
- Consultant Liaison Psychiatrist
- January 2013
2Aims
- Be contentious
- Explore current practice
- Consider costs and prevalence
- Empathy
- Psychological Explanation
- New classifications / way of thinking
- General tips
3Format
- 45 mins presentation and discussion
- 15mins trainees experience
- BREAK
- 30 mins Group discussion and feedback
- 20mins Consultation / suggestions
- 10mins Discussion / re-cap
4MUS
- Medically Unexplained Symptoms (MUS) are
persistent bodily complaints for which adequate
examination does not reveal sufficient
explanatory structural or specified pathology.
5Bertrand Russell
- When one admits that nothing is certain one
must, I think, also add that some things are more
nearly certain than others -
6Never Have Your Dog Stuffed
73 Recent Referrals
8Is this familiar?
- What do you want to say to these patients?
- What would you have said to them 20years ago?
- Do you use diagnostic terms with these patients?
- How were you taught or where did you learn about
the management of these patients? - What guidelines do you follow?
- Do doctors manage this consistently?
- How do you feel about these patients?
9Classification
- Somatisation Disorder
- Somatoform pain disorder
- Hypochondriasis
- Functional Somatic Syndromes
- Dissociative Disorder
- Conversion disorder
- Are you comfortable with any of these?
- Are your patients?
10But does it really matter?
- 22 of all people attending primary care have
sub-threshold levels of somatisation disorders - A further 5 of individuals have clinical
somatisation disorders - They account for
- 8 of all prescriptions
- 25 outpatient care
- 8 inpatient bed days and
- 5 accident and attendances
- 50 more likely to attend primary care
- 33 more likely to attend acute secondary care
- 20 of MUS patients account for 62 of spend
11Signs, symptom ill-defined conditions ICD
- 6.3 in US healthcare
- 25 of new symptoms in primary care but one
visit only - But 10 (2.5 of total) are persistent
- More common in secondary care 40 persist
12But does it really matter?
- Clinic Prevalence (95 CI)
- Chest 59 (46-72)
- Cardiology 56 (46-67)
- Gastroenterology 60 (45-73)
- Rheumatology 58 (47-69)
- Neurology 55 (45-65)
- Dental 49 (37-61)
- Gynaecology 57 (50-68)
- Total 56 (52-60)
- Nimnuan et al 2001 J Psychosom Res
13But does it really matter?
- The NHS cost in England amounts to 3.1Bn
(2008/9) with a further 5.2Bn attributable to
lost productivity and 9.3Bn reduced quality of
life Total 14Bn - Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health - 2.8Bn
- Equates to 25M 130M per year in Cornwall
- Diabetes?
- Bermingham S, Cohen A, Hague J, Parsonage M. The
cost of somatisation among the working-age
population in England for the year 2008/09 Mental
Health in Family Medicine - No health without mental health A cross
Government mental health outcomes strategy for
people of all ages Supporting document The
economic case for improving efficiency and
quality in mental health.2010 Department of
Health
14Scottish Neurological Symptoms Study
- N 3782 - To what extent can the patients
symptoms be explained by organic disease? - Not at all - 12
- Somewhat - 19
- Largely - 24
- Completely - 45
1512 Month Outcome of the 31 with MUS
16Do Medically Unexplained Symptoms Matter? Carson
et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry
200068207210
- N 300
- Similarly categorised
- Similar levels of physical disability
- Higher total symptom count and pain in those with
lower organicity - Higher levels of anxiety and depression in the
lower organicity group 70 vs 32
17Change of Diagnosis
- Completely - 0.3
- Largely - 2
- Somewhat - 0.5
- Not at all - 2
- At follow-up only 4 out of 1030 patients (0.4)
had acquired an organic disease diagnosis that
was unexpected at initial assessment and
plausibly the cause of the patients original
symptoms.
18Underlying Pathology
- Slater 1965
- Repeats Roth, Trimble/Mace, Crimlisk 2-4
- Kooiman et al - 5 out of 284
- Stone et al 4 out of 1030
- ?Negligent to continue to investigate
19Medical Generalism RCGP 2012
- Real conversations are required
- Real conversations require real empathy
- Empathy requires understanding
- Understanding needs to be conveyed
- Understanding combines
- - biomedical knowledge
- - biographical knowledge
- Conveying requires communication skills
20- Is there a way of doing things differently?
21Never Have Your Dog Stuffed
22The Development of Symptoms
23Is this familiar?
- What do we do now?
- What has changed to make this happen?
- Does that mean that outcomes have improved?
- Medical Generalism RCGP 2012
24Familiarity Breeds Contempt?
- Do we care about these patients?
- Do we like them?
- Do you collect these patients?
- Are we secretly happy when they move to a
colleague?
25What is really going on?
- We tend to respond to people in the way we
anticipate they will treat us - and
- From how others relate to us, we learn how to
relate to ourselves. - Personal biographical history
- Reciprocal roles
- Abuse and Neglect
26What is really going on?
Mother Caring Valuing Child Cared for Valued
Child/Self Caring Valuing Child/Self Cared
for Valued
27What is really going on?
Self Self
Other Self (Me)
Self Other
- It is our nature is to be nurtured we are born
to relate - We need the responsive understanding from others
to provide meaning and to regulate our emotional
states
28What is really going on?
Critical Rejecting anger Crushed Rejected
Hopeless
Contemptuous (disgusted) Contemptible
(disgusting)
Withholding (limited) Deprived (unsatisfied)
Demanding Unreasonable Overwhelmed Inadequate
Powerful Imposing Disempowered Silenced
Bullying Bullied
29What is really going on?
- We tend to respond to people in the way we
anticipate they will treat us - A person enacting one pole of a RR procedure may
either - Convey the feelings associated with the role to
others, in whom corresponding empathic feelings
may be elicited (identifying) or - Seek to elicit the reciprocating response in the
other (reciprocating)
30(No Transcript)
31But does it really matter?
- Could we make the argument that modern medicine
is spending 30-50 of its time, poorly managing
the consequences of abuse and neglect?
32A ghost in the machine?
- Descartes substance lead the mind away form
the senses - Demertzi et al 2009 Disorders of Consciousness.
N2100, - 53 mind and brain are separate
- 37 mind is fundamentally physical
33A ghost in the machine?
- There is a doctrine about the nature and place of
the mind which is prevalent among theorists, to
which most philosophers, psychologists and
religious teachers subscribe with minor
reservations. Although they admit certain
theoretical difficulties in it, they tend to
assume that these can be overcome without serious
modifications being made to the architecture of
the theory.... the doctrine states that with
the doubtful exceptions of the mentally-incompeten
t and infants-in-arms, every human being has both
a body and a mind. ... The body and the mind are
ordinarily harnessed together, but after the
death of the body the mind may continue to exist
and function.
34New Classifications
- Higher order constructs
- Less context dependant
- Less vulnerable to change
- Current FSS etc
- Absence of biological correlates / points of
rarity
35MUS
Hypochondriasis
Medical Illness
Depression and Anxiety
Somatoform Disorders
Functional Somatic Syndromes
36New Classifications
- Complex Somatic Symptom Disorder
- - health related anxiety
- - disproportionate concerns
- - excessive time and energy
- Bodily Distress Syndrome
- - cardiopulmonary
- - musculoskeletal
- - gastrointestinal
- - general
37What to do?
- Metabolic syndrome knowing what to expect and
what to do about it? - Can we make it that straightforward?
38Expect and Enquire
- CFS IBS FMA
- NEAD / dissociation
- Functional neurology
- Pelvic / Abdominal / Vertebral Pain
- Dysuria / retention symptoms
- Dysmenorrhoea
- Anxiety / depression
- Start explaining and making the links
- Avoid cure discussions / treatments
39Numbers needed to offend
- Medically unexplained
- Depression related
- All in the mind
- Stress related
- Hysterical
- Functional
- Psychosomatic
40Numbers needed to offend
- DIAGNOSIS
- All in the mind
- Hysterical
- Psychosomatic
- Medically unexplained
- Depression related
- Stress related
- Functional
41Donts
- Tell them that there is nothing wrong.
- Normalise. They are not normal for the patient.
- Say it is all in your mind
- Only reassure repeatedly
- Tell them there is nothing you can do to help.
- Give results of normal tests and reassure and
think that this alone will help. - Remove gall bladder, appendix, uterus, bowel,
teeth - Prescribe dependence forming drugs
- Retire them on grounds of ill-health
42Dos
- Indicate that you believe the patient
- Explain how symptoms occur
- Explain what they dont have
- Explain what they do have
- Emphasise that it is common
- Emphasise that it is reversible
- Emphasise that self-help is a key part of making
a recovery - Involve a carer and repeat the explanations
- Be honest and use praise
43Also
- Metaphors may be useful
- Brain playing tricks
- Use written information
- Get the family on side
- Consider Anxiety / Depression
- Use anti-depressant medication
- CBT often re-framed
- Communicate and deal with the system
44Care Plan
- Improving well-being
- - relaxation / mindfullness
- - 5 a day
- - routine / pacing / structure / diary
- Managing a crisis
- - self-management / local support
- - clear plans for primary and secondary care
- Avoiding harm
- - in-built review
- - being clear that medicine can be harmful
- - dealing with the system
- - sharing information
- - dependence forming drugs
45Resources
- Diaries
- Self-management toolkit
- Boom and bust graph
- Mental Health 5 a day
- Relaxation CD
- www.mentalhealth.org.uk
- www.neurosymptoms.org
- www.nonepilepticattacks.info
- www.NEADtrust.co.uk
- www.paintoolkit.org
46London Pilot
- 227 patients from 3 practices (0.84)
- gt1M expenditure in 2 years
- 307k in GP time alone
- 1/5 had in-patient treatment - 250k
- Intervention (over one month)
- Reduced GP contacts by 1/3 (258 vs 375)
- Reduced investigations by 1/4 (54 vs 74)
47Training GPs
- Knowledge
- Practice
- Treatment
- Services / commissioning
48Aims
- Be contentious
- Explore current practice
- Consider costs and prevalence
- Empathy
- Psychological Explanation
- New classifications / way of thinking
- General tips
49A Service
- Clear point of entry
- One-stop-shop Out-patients
- Liaison Psychiatry formulation
- CBT / GET
- Hypnotherapy (IBS)
- Mindfulness
- Physiotherapy / OT
- Pain / self management groups
- Managing the system
50Identify
- gt/ 10 attendances in 2 years
- gt/ 2 negative investigations in 2 years
- the symptom does not fit with known disease
models or physiological mechanisms - the patient is unable to give a clear and precise
description of the symptoms - symptoms seem excessive in comparison to the
pathology
51Identify
- symptoms occur in the context of a stressful
lifestyle or stressful life events - patient attends frequently for many different
symptoms - the patient seems overly anxious about the
meaning of the symptoms and has strongly held
beliefs about a disease process causing the
symptoms - patient complains of pain in multiple different
sites
52Kroenke et al 2001
533 Recent Referrals
54The End - Culture Change?
- Is this how we will be practicing medicine with
these patients in 10 years time?