Somatoform disorders Flashcards

1
Q

factitious disorder

A

a disorder in which a person feigns of induces physical symptoms, typically for the purpose of assuming the role of a sick person. (Munchausen syndrome)

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2
Q

conversion disorder

A

a disorder in which a person’s bodily symptoms affect his or her voluntary motor and sensory functions, but the symptoms are inconsistent with known medical diseases.

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3
Q

somatic symptom disorder

A

people become excessively distressed, concerned, and anxious about bodily symptoms they are experiencing, and their lives are disproportionately disrupted by the symptoms.

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4
Q

psychodynamic view of somatic/conversion disorders

A

Current psychodynamic theorists continue to believe the sufferers of these disorders have unconscious conflicts carried forth from childhood.

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5
Q

primary gain

A

the gain people derive when their somatic symptoms keep their internal conflicts out of awareness.

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6
Q

secondary gain

A

the gain people derive when their somatic symptoms elicit kindness from others or provide an excuse to avoid unpleasant activities.

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7
Q

CBT view of somatic/conversion disorders

A
  • rewards: physical symptoms yield rewards
  • communication: conversion and somatic symptoms are forms of self-expression, providing a means for people to reveal emotions that would otherwise be difficult for them to convey.
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8
Q

Multicultural view of somatic/conversion disorders

A

very high rates of stress-caused bodily symptoms in non-Western medical settings

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9
Q

Illness anxiety disorder

A

people are chronically anxious about and preoccupied with the notion that they have or are developing a serious medical illness, despite the absence of somatic symptoms.

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10
Q

CBT view of illness anxiety disorder

A

illness fears acquired through classical conditioning or modeling and people with the disorder so sensitive to bodily cues that they come to misinterpret them.

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11
Q

Treatment for illness anxiety disorder

A

Treatment is similar to what is used in OCD. (antidepressants, exposure and response prevention)

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12
Q

Psychophysiological disorders

A

biological, psychological and sociocultural factors interact to cause or worsen a physical illness.

  • ulcers
  • asthma
  • insomnia
  • muscle contraction or tension headaches
  • migraine headaches
  • hypertension
  • coronary heart disease
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13
Q

Biological factors that contribute to psychophysiological disorders

A

autonomic nervous system responds differently in different people, making some more likely to develop a psychophysiological disorder.

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14
Q

Psychological factors that contribute to psychophysiological disorders

A

certain needs, attitudes, emotions or coping styles may cause people to overreact repeatedly to stressors, and increase their chance of developing these disorders.

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15
Q

Type A v. Type B and psychophysiological effects

A
  • Type A personality style: characterized by hostility, cynicism, drivenness, impatience, competitiveness, and ambition. (more likely to develop coronary heart disease)
  • Type B personality style: more relaxed less aggressive, less concerned about time.
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16
Q

Sociocultural factors and psychophysiological disorders

A

adverse social conditions like poverty, crime, unemployment can cause ongoing stress

17
Q

psychoneuroimmunology

A

the study of connections between stress, the body’s immune system, and illness.
* link between stress and weakened immune function

18
Q

biochemical activity from stress that will slow down immune system

A

sustained increase in cortisol and norepinephrine slows down immune system and leads to chronic inflammation

19
Q

how stress impacts behavioral changes that can impact immune system

A

stress can spark behavioral changes like bad sleep, poor eating, decreased exercise, smoking and drinking.

20
Q

how personality style can impact immune system

A

people who respond to life stress with optimism, constructive coping, and resilience experience better immune system functioning.

21
Q

how social support can affect immune system

A

people who are lonely and have few social supports have poorer immune functioning

22
Q

behavioral medicine

A

a field that combines psychological and physical interventions to treat or prevent medical problems.

23
Q

relaxation training

A

a treatment procedure that teaches clients to relax at will so they can calm themselves in stressful situations. Often used to treat high blood pressure.

24
Q

biofeedback

A

a technique in which a client is given information about physiological reactions as they occur and learns to control the reactions voluntarily.

25
Q

meditation

A

Mindfulness meditation used to treat people with severe pain.

26
Q

Features of somatoform disorders

A
  • One or more distressing somatic symptom for at least 6 months
  • Excessive thoughts, feelings, or behaviors related to somatic symptoms or health concerns
    • Disproportionate and persistent thoughts of seriousness
    • Persistent high level of anxiety about symptoms
    • Excessive time and energy devoted to symptoms
27
Q

Demographics of somatoform disorders

A
  • Typical: low SES unmarried women; generally starts int teens or 20’s
  • Anxiety, depression, and substance abuse frequently co-morbid
  • Fairly uniform cross-culturally
28
Q

Psychological factors in somatoform disorders

A
  • Impulsivity, poor delay of gratification
    • Short term gain from somatic problems yields long-term social isolation
  • Manipulative behavior prominent
    • Sick role
29
Q

Psychological treatment components for somatoform disorders

A
  • accept somatic complaints as valid
  • stable level of contact regardless of symptom exacerbation
  • goal of minimizing utilization of health care services (exams, tests, medications, procedures)
30
Q

Features of conversion disorders

A
  • At least one symptom or deficit of sensory or voluntary motor function (usually paralysis, blindness, or loss of feeling)
  • No medical evidence for symptoms
  • Symptom presentation often associated with significant psychosocial stressor
31
Q

Demographics of conversion disorder

A
  • relatively rare
  • women>men
  • onset between 10-30 years old
  • Low SES, low education
  • 10-30% of patients diagnosed with conversion disorder later found to have physical etiology for symptoms
32
Q

Psychological components of conversion disorder

A
  • primary gain-
  • secondary gain-
  • inability to cope with emotional distress in initial etiology and subsequent manifestation
  • modeling relatives
  • personality disorders
33
Q

Psychological treatment components for conversion disorder

A
  • emotional support for precipitating stressor
  • expectation that symptoms will quickly wane
  • reinforce improvements and symptom reduction
  • removal of secondary gain
34
Q

Relationship/distinction between panic disorder and illness anxiety disorder

A
  • misinterpretation of physical symptoms

* Panic has fear of immediate consequences, IAD has fear of long-term consequences

35
Q

Psychological components of illness anxiety disorder

A
  • focused attention on physical sensations
  • espousal of Western concept of health as being “free from symptoms”
  • Possible learned component
    • Modeling from parents
    • benefits of sick role
36
Q

Contextual components of illness anxiety disorder

A
  • onset during stressful life event
  • high incidence of verifiable medical illness in family
  • increasing prevalence with age related to fear of aging and dying
37
Q

Treatment for illness anxiety disorder

A

not well studied-

  • psychotherapy
    • CBT
    • Reassurance/explanation
  • pharmacological
    * antidepressants
    * anxiolytics