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Somatoform, dissociative and factitious disorders

Somatoform, dissociative and factitious disorders. Dr. Anil Kakunje Professor of Psychiatry, YMC. Overview. Somatoform disorder Dissociative disorder Hypochondriasis Factitious disorder. What will you learn ?. Identification of psychosomatic illness Differentiating between them

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Somatoform, dissociative and factitious disorders

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  1. Somatoform, dissociative and factitious disorders Dr. Anil Kakunje Professor of Psychiatry, YMC

  2. Overview • Somatoform disorder • Dissociative disorder • Hypochondriasis • Factitious disorder

  3. What will you learn ? • Identification of psychosomatic illness • Differentiating between them • Management approaches

  4. Basic definitions • Somatoform disorders (Somatic symptom disorders) • Soma- body • pathological concern of individuals with the appearance or functioning of their bodies when there is no identifiable medical condition causing the physical complaints

  5. Somatoform Disorders • Somatoform Disorders • Multiple physical complaints of various systems • Usually starts at young age before the age of 30 yrs

  6. Somatoform Disorders • Somatization disorder • Briquet’s syndrome • patients have a history of many physical • complaints that can not be explained by a medical condition, the complaints are not intentionally produced • Persistent refusal to accept the advice of several doctors- doctor shopping • 20% of patients in primary care • develops during adolescence – • Treatment – pharmacotherapy and reassurance, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)

  7. Hypochondriacal disorder - Persistent preoccupation with the possibility of having one or more serious diseases…..HIV…TB…TUMOUR Normal sensations and appearances are often misinterpreted by a patient.

  8. DISSOCIATIVE DISORDER • Dissociative disorders • Individuals feel detached from themselves or their surroundings, and reality, experience, and identity may disintegrate • Precipitated by stress

  9. Historically, both somatoform and dissociative disorders used to be categorized as hysterical neurosis • -in psychoanalytic theory neurotic disorders result from underlying unconscious conflicts, anxiety that resulted from those conflicts and ego defense mechanisms

  10. Dissociative (conversion) Disorders • Partial or complete loss of the normal integration between memories of the past, awareness of identity and immediate sensations, and control of bodily movements. • Previously classified as ‘conversion hysteria’. • They are ‘psychogenic’ in origin- associated closely in time with traumatic events, insoluble problems/disturbed relationships.

  11. Dissociative (conversion) Disorders • Dissociative amnesia: Amnesia is usually centred on traumatic events, such as accidents or unexpected bereavements. Eg: Soldiers forgetting some events during battle. • Dissociative fugue: amnesia plus an apparently purposeful journey away from home or place of work during which self care is maintained. Occasionally new identity is assumed. • Dissociative stupor: profound diminution or absence of voluntary movement and normal responsiveness- Motionless for long time.

  12. Dissociative (conversion) Disorders • Trance and possession disorders: • individual acts as if taken over by another personality, spirit, deity or ‘force’, repeated set of movements, postures and utterances; occur outside culturally accepted situations. • Dissociative disorders of movement and sensation:loss of or interference with movements or loss of sensations; the disability helps the patient to escape from an unpleasant conflict, or to express dependency or resentment indirectly;

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  14. FACTITIOUS DISORDERS • Factitious disorders • a person acts as if they have an illness by deliberately producing, feigning, or exaggeratingsymptoms. • NOT MALINGERING 

  15. Factitious Disorders • Munchhausen’s syndrome/hospital hopper syndrome: • Individual feigns symptoms repeatedly and consistently. • Self-infliction of cuts or abrasions to produce bleeding, • The imitation may be so convincing- repeated investigations and operations are performed at several different hospitals. • The motivation is obscure- disorder of illness behaviour/sick role. • DD: Malingering- intentional production of symptoms , motivated by external incentives like evading criminal prosecution, obtain sickness benefits etc.

  16. Conversion vs somatoform vs factitious vs malingering

  17. Take home message • Dissociative, somatoform and factitious disorders present with vague somatic symptoms, often to the physicians. • Unnecessary and expensive investigations to be avoided. • Empathic approach helps. • Referral to psychiatrist/ consultation liaison with psychiatrist is important in managing these problems.

  18. THANK YOU

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