1 / 20

Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders

Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders. Somatoform Disorders. Somatoform Disorders- Conditions involving physical complaints of disabilities that occur without any evidence of physical pathology to account for them. Somatization Disorder Hypochondriasis Pain Disorder Conversion Disorder.

Ava
Download Presentation

Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders

  2. Somatoform Disorders • Somatoform Disorders- Conditions involving physical complaints of disabilities that occur without any evidence of physical pathology to account for them. • Somatization Disorder • Hypochondriasis • Pain Disorder • Conversion Disorder

  3. Somatization Disorder • Characteristics include • Multiple complaints and ailments that extend over a long period beginning before age 30 • These complaints are not explained by physical illness or injury. • Must include four levels of symptoms • Four pain symptoms (different areas of body) • Two gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea, bloating) • One sexual symptom (sexual dysfunction / irregularity) • One pseudoneurological symptom (sensory loss)

  4. Somatization Disorder II • Up to 10x more common in females • Evidence is linked with some genetic factors. • Possibly the underlying etiology is expressed differently in females and males. These being somatization and antisocial behavior respectively. • Evidence is linked to family disoganization such as abuse

  5. Hypochandriasis • Differentiation from Somatization Disorder • Onset may be after age 30 • Focus on having a disease rather than symptoms • Unrealistic fears of disease • Difficulty in describing exact symptoms (general) • Mental orientation of alertness for new symptoms • Focus on remedies and studying different diseases. • Lack of intense fear normally associated with having their feared disease • Has a 4-9% prevalence in medical practices • Malingering- consciously faking symptoms to achieve a nonmedical goal.

  6. Hypochandriasis • Theories • Interpersonal • I deserve more attention • Don’t expect as much from me as a person • Maintanence by physicians rejection • Abuse and Trauma as children

  7. Pain Disorder • A somatoform Disorder characterized by reported pain of sufficient duration and severity to cause significant life disruption and the absence of medical pathology that would explain the experienced pain. • Subjectivity of Pain

  8. Conversion Disorder • A somatoform disorder in which symptoms of some physical malfunction or loss of control appear without any underlying organic pathology; originally called hysteria. • Secondary gain or excuse enabling escape or avoidance of an intolerably stressful situation.

  9. Treatment of Somatoform Disorders • Caution against medication • Support, reassurance, explanations etc.. • Prognosis generally poor

  10. Dissociative Disorders • Dissociative Amnesia • Memory loss following a stressful experience • Dissociative Fugue • Memory loss accompanied by leaving home and establishing a new identity • Depersonalization Disorder • Experience of the self is altered • Dissociative Identity Disorder • At least two distinct ego states

  11. Dissociative Amnesia • Unable to recall important information usually of a traumatic or stressful nature • Amnestic episode- forgotten period • Dissociative amnesia may be: • localized –losses all memory within a period of time (most common) • selective- remember some but not all • generalized- may forget identity • Continuous- unlike others there is not an end

  12. Dissociative Amnesia (Cont) • Interference is primarily with episodic memory (ones autobiographical memory) while semantic memory (facts) remains intact

  13. Dissociative Fugue • Forget personal details, identity, and flee to an entirely new location • Tend to end abruptly • Majority regain most of memories without a recurrence • Must face consequences of their fugue • Illegal or violent activity etc…

  14. Dissociative Identity Disorder • Develop two or more distinct personalities (subpersonalities or alternate personalities) • Switching- transition from one subpersonality to another • Primary or Host Personality- that personality which appears most often • 97% of cases are thought to have experienced abuse

  15. Women are diagnosed 3 times as often as men • Subpersonality Interaction • Mutual Amnesia- no awareness of alters • Cognizant- each alter is aware of the other (hear each others voices and talk among themselves) • One-way Amnesic- some are aware of others without them being aware of them (most common) • Co-conscious- quiet observers with no interaction

  16. How do subpersonalities differ • Vital statistics (age, sex, family history, race) • Abilities and Preferences • Evidence suggests different physiological responses • Iatrogenic- unintentionally produced by practitioners • 100 cases in 1973 and now thousands • Increase due to 1) belief that it exists and 2) diagnostic procedures tend to be more accurate

  17. Etiology / Explanations • Psychodynamic • Caused by excessive memory repression • Behavioral • Operant conditioning in which forgetting is reinforced by drop in anxiety • State-Dependent Learning • Extremely rigid state-to-memory links • Self-Hypnosis • Self induced hypnotic amnesia

  18. Treatments for Dissociative Amnesia and Fugues • Psychodynamic therapy • Hypnotic therapy • Drug therapy • Sodium pentobarbital (“truth serums”). Medication decreases inhibitions making recall more likely but may forget again upon awake. • All focus on uncovering memories

  19. Treatment Dissociative Dissociative Disorder • Three Major Goals • 1) Help recognize fully the nature of their disorder • 2) Recover gaps in their memory • 3) Integrate their personalities into one functioning personality • Fusion- final merging of 2 or more alters

  20. Goal is integration • Help each alter to understand they are part of one person • Use alters names for convenience not to confirm existence of separate autonomy • All alters should be treated with fairness • Encourage empathy amongst the alters • Gentleness and supportiveness are needed in consideration of childhood traumas

More Related