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(Somatoform Pain
Disorders and CRPS; lecture/seminar notes)
OVERVIEW
SOMATOFORM
DISORDERS
Differential
Diagnosis of Pain Complaints:
-
Physical
Disorder with no psychological overlay or causation*
-
Somatoform
Disorder
-
Factitious
Disorder
-
Malingering
-
Drug Dependence
*Biopsychosocial
Model of Disease
Diagnosis-by-exclusion (vs. inclusion)
These are closely
related to anxiety disorders. Person has poor sight; does not
recognize that concerns are excessive or unreasonable. Reassurance
of normal functioning from others, including physicians is not
helpful.
Their symptoms
cannot be fully explained by a physical cause. In people with
somatoform disorder, medical test results are either normal or don't
explain the person's symptoms. People who have somatoform disorder
often become very worried about their health because they don't know
what is causing their health problems. The symptoms of somatoform
disorder are similar to the symptoms of other illnesses. People with
this disorder may have several medical evaluations and tests to be
sure that they do not have a specific illness, injury or disorder.
Symptoms of
somatoform disorder may include frequent headaches, back pain,
abdominal cramping and pelvic pain. Other symptoms include pain in
the joints, legs and arms, and chest or abdominal pain. Somatoform
disorder may also cause gastrointestinal problems, such as nausea,
bloating, vomiting, diarrhea and food intolerance. Sometimes
somatoform disorder makes it painful for a person to urinate, even
if he or she doesn't have an infection. It can also cause problems
with sexual function for both men and women, such as erectile
failures and anorgasmia.
HISTORY & SYMPTOMS
-
Concept present
at least 4000 years
-
Name, hysteria,
used since Hippocrates
-
Egyptian
treatment approaches followed from accepted pathophysiology
-
Related to
demon possession in middle ages
-
A focus of
Charcot and Freud - Briquet’s Syndrome 100 yrs ago: “More
perplexing…are those patients who manifest symptoms resulting
from a local bodily lesion, but in whom the severity of the
complaints and the magnitude of the disability are far greater
than would be expected from the nature and extent of the local
lesion alone.”
-
FIRST rule-out
is always narcotic addiction
-
Known and
taught to family physicians and internists
-
25-50% of
primary care visits with no medical cause for complaint
-
Syndrome
criteria in the DSM-III (1980)
-
Lifetime
prevalence 0.1-0.38% in community sample
-
Female to male
ratio 10:1-20:1
-
Found in 10-20%
first degree female relatives
-
Male relatives
have an increased risk of somatization disorder, antisocial
personality disorder, substance abuse disorders
-
tend to marry
each other
-
Depression 2.8
times more frequent
-
Generalized
Anxiety Disorder 2.5 times more frequent
-
Higher rates of
childhood illness or family member with chronic illness
-
Onset in teens
-
presentation
dramatic, vague, complicated, seductive, manipulative and
emotional
-
suggesting of
medical condition but absence of completely explanatory physical
findings
-
Symptoms
fluctuate with stress
-
Course is
chronic
-
Relationship
problems
-
Symptoms
represent emotional communication rather than evidence of
disease
-
Frequently
found in medical clinics
-
Psychological
factors present but unrecognized
-
dependency a
core issue
-
conditions are
unconscious
-
limited insight
-
not
psychologically-minded
-
Vague,
Dramatic, Exaggerated presentation, 12-14 sxs
-
Pain described
vivid, colorful, discursive, circumstantial…effect rather than
nature
-
Hx of mx MDs,
numerous (unnecessary) procedures
-
Histrionic
-
Narcissistic, emotional, dependent, manipulative
-
Seeks
out solely or predominately a physician who will
prescribe narcotics
-
Has
drugs of choice which others may not willingly prescribe
-
Discontinues (“lost to followup”) to those finding no +
findings
-
Self-selects own 2nd, 3rd opinions
-
Secondary
gain
-
Removes
self from educational, sexual, and/or occupational
competition
-
Interpersonal
Inadequacies
-
Those with pain
disorder are notoriously resistant to psychological
interpretation and intervention for their complaints.
CONCERNS
-
Unnecessary
surgical procedures
-
Drug dependence
-
Suicide attempts in the future
-
Improper
treatment common:
-
Invasive
work-ups
-
High costs of
care
CURRENT APPROACH
-
Explore
psychosocial problems
-
Consider SSRI
-
Cognitive
Behavioral Therapy
-
Explanatory
Therapy
1. HYPOCHONDRIASIS
-
Preoccupation
with fears of having, or ideas that one has, a serious disease
based on the person's misinterpretations of bodily symptoms.
-
The
preoccupation persists despite appropriate medical evaluation
and reassurance.
-
The belief
(Criterion 1) is not of delusional intensity and is not
restricted to a circumscribed concern about body appearance.
-
the
preoccupation causes clinically significant distress or
impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of
functioning.
-
The duration of
the disturbance is at least 6 months.
2. SOMATIZATION
DISORDER
-
History of many
physical complaints beginning before age 30 that occur over a
period of several years and result in treatment being sought
-
significant
impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of
functioning:
-
Each of the
following criteria must have been met, with individual symptoms
occurring at any time during the course of the disturbance:
-
Four pain
symptoms: A history of pair related to at least four
different sites or functions (such as head, abdomen, back,
joints, extremities, chest, rectum, during sexual
intercourse, during menstruation, or during urination.
-
Two
gastrointestinal symptoms: A history of at least two
gastrointestinal symptoms other than pain (such as nausea,
diarrhea, bloating, vomiting other than during pregnancy, or
intolerance of several different foods).
-
One sexual
symptom: A history of at least one sexual or reproductive
symptom other than pain (such as sexual indifference,
erectile or ejaculatory dysfunction, irregular menses,
excessive menstrual bleeding, vomiting throughout pregnancy.
-
One
pseudoneurologic symptom: A history of at least one symptom
or deficit suggesting a neurological disorder not limited to
pain (conversion symptoms such as blindness, double vision,
deafness, loss of touch or pain sensation, hallucinations,
aphonia, impaired coordination or balance,
paralysis or localised weakness, difficulty swallowing,
difficulty breathing, urinary retention, seizures;
dissociative symptoms such as amnesia; or loss of
consciousness other than fainting)
3. PAIN DISORDER
a.
Pain
in one or more anatomical sites is the predominant focus of the
clinical presentation and is of sufficient severity to warrant
clinical attention.
b.
The
pain causes clinically significant distress or impairment i social,
occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
c.
Psychological factors are judged to have an important role in the
onset, severity, exacerbation, or maintenance of the pain.
d.
The
symptom or deficit is not intentionally produced or feigned (as in
factitious disorder or malingering).
e.
The
pain is not better accounted for by a mood, anxiety, or psychotic
disorder and does not meet criteria for dyspareunia.
ACUTE: less 6 mo.
CHRONIC: 6 mo. or more
4. BODY DYSMORPHIC
DISORDER
-
Preoccupation
with an imagined defect in appearance. If a slight
-
physical
anomaly is present, the person's concern is markedly excessive.
-
The
preoccupation causes significant distress or impairment in
social,
-
occupational,
or other important areas of functioning.
-
The
preoccupation is not better accounted for by another mental
disorder
-
(e.g.
dissatisfaction with body shape and size in anorexia nervosa).
5.
CONVERSION DISORDER
-
One or more
symptoms or deficits affecting voluntary motor or sensory
function that suggest a neurological or general medical
condition.
-
Psychological
factors are judged to be associated with the symptom or deficit
because the initiation or exacerbation of the symptom or deficit
is preceded by conflicts or other stressors.
-
The symptom or
deficit is not intentionally produced or feigned (as in
factitious disorder or malingering).
-
The symptom or
deficit cannot, after appropriate investigation, be fully
explained by a general medical condition, or by the direct
effects of a substance, or as a culturally sanctioned behavior
or experience.
-
The symptom or
deficit causes clinically significant distress or impairment in
social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning or
warrants medical evaluation.
-
The symptom or
deficit is not limited to pain or sexual dysfunction, does
-
not occur
exclusively during the course of somatization disorder, and is
not
-
better
accounted for by another mental disorder.
6. UNDIFFERENTIATED
SOMATOFORM DISORDER
________________________________________
Van De Vusse et al.
The Pain Clinic, June 1, 2003, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 143-149. Complex
Regional Pain Syndrome is a controversial clinical diagnosis. In a
study of 25 patients with possible CRPS, one out of four CRPS
experts disagreed with the diagnosis when it was diagnosed by a
colleague. CRPS could not be diagnosed with much certainty and
idiopathic and somatoform pain syndromes were important differential
diagnoses.
Complex Regional
Pain Syndrome (CRPS)
The most important role for testing is to help rule out other
conditions: a samatoform disorder, a factitious disorder,
malingering or narcotic seeking and/or narcotic dependence.
Psychological
factors
Although CPRS differs from somatoform pain disorder
specifically because of the objective evidence of disturbed
peripheral blood flow, it has many similarities. Patients with CPRS
invariably have significant psychological pathology, typically, but
not always pre-existing the specific injury. These factors must
always been identified, whether causally related to the specific
injury or not.
-
The term
"complex regional pain syndrome" was introduced to replace the
term "reflex sympathetic dystrophy."
-
CRPS Type I
used to be called “RSD,” absence of causative nerve injury
-
CRPS Type II
used to be called “causalgia,” a definable peripheral nerve
injury
-
Both Type I and
Type II are differentiated from a somatoform pain disorder by
objective presence of disturbed peripheral blood flow
-
The terminology
was changed because the pathophysiology of CRPS is not known
with certainty. It was determined that a descriptive term such
as CRPS was preferable to "reflex sympathetic dystrophy" which
carries with it the assumption that the sympathetic nervous
system is important in the pathophysiology of the painful
condition.
-
The terms CRPS
Type I and CRPS Type II are meant as descriptors of certain
chronic pain syndromes. They do not embody any assumptions about
pathophysiology. For the most part the clinical phenomena
characteristics of CRPS Type I are the same as seen in CRPS Type
II.
-
Pain that can
be abolished or greatly reduced by sympathetic blockade (for
example, a stellate ganglion block) is called sympathetically
maintained pain.
-
Pain that is
not affected by sympathetic blockade is called sympathetically
independent pain.
The pain in some CRPS patients is sympathetically maintained; in
others, the pain is sympathetically independent.
-
If a physician
believes the CRPS condition is related to an accepted
occupational injury, written documentation of the relationship
(on a more probable than not basis) to the original condition
should be provided. Treatment for CRPS will only be authorized
if the relationship to an accepted injury is established.
Key Issues in
Making a Diagnosis:
At least four of the following must be present in order for a
diagnosis of CRPS to be made.
-
"burning" pain
-
increased skin
sensitivity
-
changes in skin
temperature: warmer or cooler compared to the opposite extremity
-
changes in skin
color: often blotchy, purple, pale, or red
-
changes in skin
texture: shiny and thin, and sometimes excessively sweaty
-
changes in nail
and hair growth patterns
-
swelling and
stiffness in affected joints
-
motor
disability, with decreased ability to move the affected body
part
-
atrophy over
limbs over time
-
Some
experts believe there are three stages associated with CRPS,
marked by progressive changes in the skin, muscles, joints,
ligaments, and bones of the affected area, although this
progression has not yet been validated by clinical research
studies.
-
Stage one
is thought to last from 1 to 3 months and is characterized
by severe, burning pain, along with muscle spasm, joint
stiffness, rapid hair growth, and alterations in the blood
vessels that cause the skin to change color and temperature.
-
Stage two
lasts from 3 to 6 months and is characterized by
intensifying pain, swelling, decreased hair growth, cracked,
brittle, grooved, or spotty nails, softened bones, stiff
joints, and weak muscle tone.
-
Stage three
the syndrome progresses to the point where changes in the
skin and bone are no longer reversible. Pain becomes
unyielding and may involve the entire limb or affected area.
There may be marked muscle loss (atrophy), severely limited
mobility, and involuntary contractions of the muscles and
tendons that flex the joints. Limbs may become contorted.
Cause of CRPS
-
Doctors are not
sure what causes CRPS. In some cases the sympathetic nervous
system plays an important role in sustaining the pain. The most
recent theories suggest that pain receptors in the affected part
of the body become responsive to a family of nervous system
messengers (catecholamines). Animal studies indicate that
norepinephrine, a catecholamine released from sympathetic
nerves, acquires the capacity to activate pain pathways after
tissue or nerve injury. The incidence of sympathetically
maintained pain in CRPS is not known. Some experts believe that
the importance of the sympathetic nervous system depends on the
stage of the disease.
-
There is no
specific cause, but stress or conflict may be evident. The pain
may have a special significance or may serve as a way to receive
attention. People with this disorder may receive attention,
sympathy or relief from responsibilities from others, or
financial compensation from disability that may sustain the pain
and behavior.
-
Another theory
is that post-injury CRPS (CRPS II) is caused by a triggering of
the immune response, which leads to the characteristic
inflammatory symptoms of redness, warmth, and swelling in the
affected area. CRPS may therefore represent a disruption of the
healing process. In all likelihood, CRPS does not have a single
cause, but is rather the result of multiple causes that produce
similar symptoms.
-
How is CRPS diagnosed?
Differential
Diagnosis
The differential diagnosis of this disorder includes
peripheral neuropathy, myofascial pain, somatoform pain disorder and
malingering. Opinions should always been obtained, ideally from a
neurologist with experience with these disorders, specifically to
objectively document skin and/or temperature changes and to consider
alternative diagnoses.
Causes, incidence, and risk factors:
Complications:
Sedative or analgesic dependence (drug abuse and dependence) can
develop.
Most experts agree
that it is more common in young women.
CRPS treatment
Physical
therapy:
Psychotherapy:
Sympathetic
nerve block:
Medications:
Surgical
sympathectomy:
Spinal cord
stimulation:
Intrathecal drug
pumps:
National Guidelines
Clearing House (Dept. Labor, August, 2002)
The Pain Clinic
June 1, 2003. pp 143-149 |