Medically unexplained symptoms Flashcards

(4 cards)

1
Q

How common?

A

8% of GP patients have 3 or more MUS
Collectively cost billions of dollars
More money spent on MUS than dementia

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2
Q

What are MUS?

A

Symptoms without a clear physical illness

Symptoms may be inducible with a suggestion

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3
Q

Common approaches to managing MUS

A
  1. Validation
    Acknowledge that the symptoms are real and distressing
    Acknowledge that medicine has limits and the uncertainty is frustrating
  2. Explanation
    Consider and record physical, psychiatric and psychosocial diagnoses and symptoms
    Craft explanations that include the body and the mind
    Always consider the role of past or current trauma, psychosocial stress and personal vulnerabilities
  3. Coordination of care and advocacy
    Coordinate care to avoid duplication of investigations and exacerbation of iatrogenic harm
  4. Symptom management
    Offer symptom relief and practical support to address disability (eg home help, workplace assessment)
    Encourage physical therapies (eg massage, physiotherapy, hydrotherapy)
    Manage comorbidities as effectively as possible
  5. Broadening the agenda beyond physical symptom management
    Encourage psychological care to address the impact of illness and underlying issues that may exacerbate symptoms
    Address healthy lifestyle goals
  6. Harm minimisation
    Check for new diagnoses when the illnesses changes significantly (eg the emergence of a new symptom) or during a yearly health check
  7. Empathy
    Manage the therapeutic relationship carefully and seek support if it becomes unhelpful
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4
Q

Rubber hand illusion

A

In the Rubber Hand Illusion, the feeling of ownership of a rubber hand displaced from a participant’s real occluded hand is evoked by synchronously stroking both hands with paintbrushes. A change of perceived finger location towards the rubber hand (proprioceptive drift) has been reported to correlate with this illusion

the feeling that a rubber hand belongs to one’s body (feeling of ownership) is brought about by stroking a visible rubber hand synchronously to the participant’s own occluded hand. In the first work describing this phenomenon,

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