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‘Caring Rather T han C uring,’ the Simulated Syndromes

‘Caring Rather T han C uring,’ the Simulated Syndromes. Jonny Gerkin , MD Assistant Professor UNC Department of Psychiatry. What are we really talking about? Somatoform Disorders, Factitious Disorders and Malingering. SOME VOCABULARY Unconscious Conscious Primary gain Secondary gain

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‘Caring Rather T han C uring,’ the Simulated Syndromes

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  1. ‘Caring Rather Than Curing,’ the Simulated Syndromes Jonny Gerkin, MD Assistant Professor UNC Department of Psychiatry

  2. What are we really talking about? • Somatoform Disorders, Factitious Disorders and Malingering

  3. SOME VOCABULARY • Unconscious • Conscious • Primary gain • Secondary gain • Sick role • Somatization • Simulation Prepare to be bored!.. briefly

  4. Unconscious • The division of the mind in psychoanalytic theory containing elements of psychic makeup, such as memories or repressed desires, that are not subject to conscious perception or control but that often affect conscious thoughts and behavior. • Conscious • In psychoanalysis, the component of waking awareness perceptible by a person at any given instant; consciousness.

  5. Primary gain • The direct alleviation of anxiety by a defense mechanism; the relief from emotional conflict or tension provided by neurotic symptoms or illness. The "gain" may not be particularly evident to an outside observer. • Secondary gain • The external advantage derived from an illness, such as rest, gifts, personal attention, release from responsibility, and disability benefits. If he/she is deliberately exaggerating symptoms for personal gain, then he/she is malingering. However, secondary gain may simply be an unconscious psychological component of symptoms and other personalities.

  6. Sick role • A term used in medical sociology concerning the social aspects of falling ill and the privileges and obligations that accompany it…being sick means that the sufferer enters a role of 'sanctioned deviance.‘ i.e., they get to skip work! Sick Role, not to be confused with Rollin’

  7. Somatization • A process describe as the tendency of certain patients to experience and communicate psychological and interpersonal problems in the form of somatic distress and medically unexplained (or out of proportion) symptoms for which they seek medical help. • It is vital for medical practitioners to recognize somatization as a MASKED PRESENTATION OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS. Somatization ≠ Somatoform D/O

  8. Simulation • In this context we are referring to the production of symptoms. Whether it is conscious or unconscious, volitional or non-volitional, is secondary.

  9. All of the above have some elements of SIMULATION and DECEPTION & elements of primary and secondary gain - each existing on a continuum & varying over time and context.

  10. Somatoform disorders include: • Somatization Disorder • Undifferentiated Somatoform Disorder • Conversion Disorder • Pain Disorder • Hypochondriasis • Body Dysmorphic Disorder • Somatoform Disorder NOS Common feature = unexplained physical symptom not intentionally produced

  11. There are major difficulties in the clinical application of somatoform disorders… • Spinal Cord Astrocytoma Mistaken for Conversion Disorder… • Catatonia mistaken for Conversion… • ‘a diagnosis of conversion disorder mustremain a provisional hypothesis that has to be periodicallyreevaluated.’ Excluding a medical cause for symptoms is problematic

  12. Somatization Disorder: • There is a history of many physical complaints, beginning before the age of 30. • Each of the following criteria must have been met: • Four pain symptoms (4 Pain) • Two gastrointestinal symptoms (2 Stomachs) • One sexual symptom (1 Sex) • One pseudoneurologic symptom (Convert) • Each symptom cannot be fully explained by a known medical condition, or, if there is a demonstrated medical condition, the impairment is in excess of what would be expected. Mnemonic: Recipe 4 Pain: Convert 2 stomachs to 1 sex

  13. Undifferentiated Somatoform Disorder • One or more physical complaints cannot be fully explained by medical condition/substances, lasting 6 or more months, do not fulfill criteria for Somatization d/o – generally similar characteristics just fewer symptoms Somatoform D/O NOS • Pseudocyesis, non-psychotic hypochondriacal symptoms < 6 months, unexplained physical symptoms < 6months Differ from Conversion b/c symptoms physical and time

  14. Conversion Disorder • Neurological (voluntary motor or sensory) symptoms or deficits that are associated with psychological factors that cause significant distress • Symptoms or deficits are not intentionally produced • Typically begin abruptly and dramatically • La belle indifference (not pathognomonic, no prognostic value) – not distressed • Psychodynamic views – primary gain, e.g. a conflict about aggression expressed by paralyzed arm • Most patients show rapid response to treatment • Pseudosz, amnesia, tremor more likely to have poor outcome – sig relationship to childhood (sexual) trauma Pseudoseizures, paralysis, amnesia, blindness, ataxia, deafness…

  15. Pain Disorder • The primary criteria require that pain be the primary complaint and that it causes significant distress or functional impairment. • Psychological factors have important role. • Not intentionally produced. • Not better accounted for by Mood, Anxiety or Psychotic D/O, not meet criteria for Dyspareunia • Types: • Associated with Psychological Factors • Associated with both Psychological Factors and a General Medical Condition Pain is the most common reason a patient presents to a physician for evaluation.

  16. Hypochondriasis • Core feature is fear of disease or a conviction that one has a disease despite normal physical exam results and investigations and physician reassurance. At least 6 months. • In clinical practice sorting out delusional from non-delusional hypochondriasis is sometimes difficult. Can the person consider the possibility that the feared disease is not present? • Primary hypochondriasis appears to be chronic – potentially better classified as a personality style or trait, worsens with stress. • Preoccupation not better accounted for by GAD, OCD, Panic D/O, MDE, Sep Anxiety or other Somatoform D/O ‘Hypochondria is the only illness that I don't have.’

  17. Body DysmorphicDisorder • The preoccupation with an imagined defect in appearance (if a slight anomaly is present, the individual’s concern with it is judged to be markedly excessive*) that is accompanied by significant distress or impairment in social or occupational functioning. • Increasingly seen as an OCD spectrum disorder. • Delusional BDD may represent a difference in insight rather than a distinct syndrome. • MDD is highly comorbid, OCD, social phobia, substance use as well. • “Normal body disastisfaction” exists, duh Anyone watch the Hills?

  18. Clinical Vignette: The medical service requests a consult, the pt is demanding unnecessary trx, pain out of proportion. • 28 yo SWF c/o pelvic pain, N and V requesting IV vancomycin for her “pelvic infection.” She vaguely describes some vaginal discharge. • She is afebrile with stable vital signs otherwise. • H/o unilateral oophorectomy d/t pain of ovarian cyst and endometriosis 4 months prior. Post-op course was “complicated” by soft tissue infection requiring multiple courses of vancomycin. Wait there’s more…

  19. The surgical wound is now healed, but she continues to note pain in her pelvis that she feels has only been resolved by IV vancomycin previously. • She describes being diagnosed with Fibromyalgia, low back pain, HA and generalized large joint pains. • She endorses h/o painful intercourse, painful menses • She notes she has been evaluated in the ED too many times to count dating back to childhood and that she has had multiple practitioners not know what to do which has led to ‘firing’ many of them. • She does endorse a history of tumultuous interpersonal relationships, some history of domestic violence and a childhood that was less than nurturing. • She denies depressive or significant anxiety symptoms. She does not see any possible relationship of her symptoms to recent psychosocial stressors to include her male ‘roommate’ moving out. She denies substance abuse history. • Lab studies unremarkable. That’s probably enough info…

  20. Differential anyone? • Complications of her multiple surgeries, such as adhesions, abscess or other infectious etiologies or autoimmune condition • Substance abuse • Factitious disorder • Malingering • Where’s the significant secondary gain?? Somatization Disorder Remember -Recipe 4 Pain: Convert 2 stomachs to 1 sex

  21. Clinical Vignette: The medical service requests a consult, the pt is demanding unnecessary trx, pain out of proportion. • 28 yo SWF c/o pelvic pain, N and V requesting IV vancomycin for her “pelvic infection.” She vaguely describes some vaginal discharge. • She is afebrile with stable vital signs otherwise. • H/o unilateral oophorectomy d/t pain of ovarian cyst and endometriosis 4 months prior. Post-op course was “complicated” by soft tissue infection requiring multiple courses of vancomycin. Wait there’s more…

  22. The surgical wound is now healed, but she continues to note pain in her pelvis that she feels has only been resolved by IV vancomycin previously. • She describes being diagnosed with Fibromyalgia, low back pain, HA and generalized large joint pains. • She endorses h/o painful intercourse, painful menses. • She notes she has been evaluated in the ED too many times to count dating back to childhood and that she has had multiple practitioners not know what to do which has led to ‘firing’ many of them. • She does endorse a history of tumultuous interpersonal relationships, some history of domestic violence and a childhood that was less than nurturing. • She denies depressive or significant anxiety symptoms. She does not see any possible relationship of her symptoms to recent psychosocial stressors to include her male ‘roommate’ moving out. She denies substance abuse history. • Lab studies unremarkable. Recipe 4 pain: Convert 2 Stomachs to 1 Sex

  23. Management.. Limit settingand caring rather than curing…

  24. Recommended potential management approaches: • 1) Reattribution approach – linking symptoms to psychological stressors. Good for those with some insight, primary care settings. • 2) Psychotherapeutic - focus upon trusting relationship, persistent somatizers. • 3) Directive – interventions framed in medical model, hostile patients who deny psychological or social factors in their symptomatology. Evidence suggests the best choice for most patients is management by their PCP in consultation with a shrink.

  25. Exercise, PT • Relaxation, Meditation, Hypnotherapy • Behavioral (Exposure forHypochondriasis) • Suggestion and reassurance (emphasizing lack of serious illness diagnoses and likelihood of improvement through activity) • CBT (may be preferred for Hypochondriasis, Somatization) • Dynamic, Group, Family Psychotherapies • Medications (target comorbidities, antidepressants, SSRI/TCA’s primarily) Avoid explanations that are heard as, “It’s all in your head,” duh

  26. Deception Syndromes…

  27. Deception Syndromes • Factitious Disorder • NOS (Proxy types here) • Predominantly physical signs/sxs • Predominantly psychological signs/sxs • Combined • Malingering • Less a diagnosis than a socially unacceptable behavior with legal ramifications – assigned a V code “Just because I’m faking it doesn’t mean I ain’t sick.”

  28. Factitious Disorder (common - physical) • Intentional production or feigning of physical signs/sxs, behaviors are surreptitious (stealthy) • Motivation for the behavior is to assume sick role (unconscious) • External incentives for the behavior or improving physical well being are absent • No aliases generally or travel from hospital system to system Common risk factors: F, single, 30’s, prior health care work, cluster B PD w/Borderline fx.

  29. Factitious Disorder (Munchausen’s) • Same criteria with self-induction of disease, but more pervasive with use of aliases while ‘hospital hopping,’ & pseudologia fantastica (pathological lying – grandiose storytelling) • Munchausen’s by Internet? Seriously? Yup, DSM-V Common risk factors: M, single, 40’s, Cluster B PD w/ASPD fx

  30. Among the most common presentations of self induced illness have been chest pain, endocrine disorders, coagulopathies, infections and neurological symptoms. • Diagnostic clues include Low C-peptide, dissociation of fever and pulse, laxative in stool, high urinary K (diuretics), serum assays for anticoag, etc., low serum thyroglobulin But what about feigned psychological symptoms?...

  31. Factitious Disorder Primarily Psychological.. • Majority of factitious disorders describe physical symptoms alone. • Factitious psychological symptoms are generally in association with either authentic or fabricated physical symptoms • Ganser’s syndrome – approximate answers, closely related to factitious, feigning dementia

  32. One of my patients as a resident was a former Duke and Syracuse Basketball player & CEO of a drug company, who suffered with “anxiety,” though he never accepted prescriptions for the medications he was “taking” and internet searches never revealed any evidence and he was only in his early 30’s.

  33. Proposed motivations for factitious disorder: • Need to be center of attention • Longing to be cared for • Maladaptive reaction to loss or separation • Anger at physicians or displaced onto them • Pleasure derived from deceiving others (“duping delight”) So how do we manage this stuff?

  34. Management and Treatment • Indirect confrontation or risk hostility, departure AMA, threats of law suits • Ex: ‘Some patients may do something to themselves as a way of seeking help…’ • Treat comorbid psychiatric issues (Depression, PD, Anxiety, Substance abuse) with meds and psychotherapy. • Supportive Psychotherapy may allow for relationship not contingent upon new physical symptoms Invasive/risky diagnostic and treatment procedures should be based on objective evidence only.

  35. Factitious Disorder by Proxy – actually covered by Factitious NOS per DSM-IV • Also known as Munchausen’s by Proxy Parents (usually mom) who have induced disease in their children.

  36. Differential for Munchausen by Proxy: • Pediatric Somatization Syndromes • Somatoform Disorder by proxy (parent’s anxiety projected onto child) • Infanticide/Murder • Psychosis in parent • Child abuse (garden variety) • Factitious behavior initiated by child • Malingering by child (school rejection) • Unrecognized physical disease Blended form of the condition in which child self-produces symptoms w/aid of parent

  37. Angel of Death Syndrome • Hospital Epidemics of Factitious Disorder by Proxy – better described as serial murder Orville Lynn Majors, Clinton, Indiana, at least 130 murdersRichard Angelo, Long Island, New York, at least 10 murdersMichael Swango, New York, at least 4 murdersDr. Shipman one of the world's most prolific serial killers, claiming at least 215 victims in Britain.Genene Jones, Texas, at least 20 murdersEfrenSaldivar, California, at least 6 murdersBeverley Allitt, Britain, at least 4 murders

  38. Malingering • By definition – motivated by specific, recognizable external incentives to produce, exaggerate or simulate physical or psychological illness Hoover’s sign..but what’s the motivation?

  39. Malingering • Embellishment of previous or concurrent illness is most commonly encountered • Symptoms tend to disappear when the person obtains the desired goal or is confronted with irrefutable evidence – though not always • REMINDER: more of an accusation of external motives than a psychiatric diagnosis • HOWEVER: presence of secondary gains are NOT evidence of malingering per se. Specific neuropsych testing can occasionally be useful.

  40. Rule out malingering in… • Patients on disability. • Patients involved in litigation related to a psychiatric condition. • Patients seeking a prescription for a controlled substance during the initial interview. Story too perfect, too vague, nothing works, heard about this medication Xanax from a friend…

  41. CONTINUUM Conversion Malingering opposite poles of purely unconscious and purely conscious motivation Difficult at any given moment to know where the patient is on this continuum Pt’s with somatoform d/o’s are generally consistent in their symptom presentation regardless of audience/observation

  42. The Paralyzed Paralegal • 35yo woman, no significant med hx • Presents to ER with hemiparesis • Workup (MRI, EKG, Carotid dopplers, Echo) negative • Family history: Mother w/CVA last year • Onset of symptoms after discovering husband’s extramarital affair

  43. The Anxious Accountant • 35yo man • 5th primary care visit this month • Complains of mild headache, worries that he has brain tumor • Neuro exam: wnl • CT head: negative • Pt still worries that he has cancer

  44. The Anguished Angler • 52yo man with several year history of LBP, persistent • History of HTN, some alcohol • Started after job loss, has not returned to work • Does not participate in activities due to pain • Multiple MRIs unrevealing of source • PT, OTC analgesics of little benefit; opiate analgesics transiently relieving

  45. The Plasticized Pop Star • 48yo man • Presents to plastic surgeon complaining of nose deformity • History of multiple prior cosmetic procedures • Embarrassed by appearance, agoraphobic

  46. The Anemic Aide • 31 yo single female surgical nurse aide • Refractory and poorly characterized anemia • Recent break up with surgery resident • Found with extra butterfly needles on her person at work

  47. The Fatigued Farmer • 58 yo man whose farm is failing • No sequelae of chemical exposure on repeated exhaustive medical evaluations • Pursuing disability • Litigation against chemical fertilizer company

  48. Remember that we cannot cure unexplained illness, but we can care for those afflicted by them….which generally helps.

  49. Levenson, James, and American Publishing. The American Psychiatric Publishing textbook of psychosomatic medicine. Arlington, VA: Amer Psychiatric Pub Inc, 2005. 271-309. Print. • The Psychiatric Interview, Practical Guides in Psychiatry. 'Ed'. Daniel J Carlat. Newburyport, MA: Lippincott Wiliiams & Wilkins, 2005. Print. References

  50. Thanks for your attention!

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