Somatoform (psychological conflicts presenting with physical
complaints) are common among those claiming physical disability. It
may arise from fear or arise concurrent with depression, and it
prolongs the recovery from illness and injury.
When an individual
has vague, multiple or nonresolving physical complaints in the absence (or in
excess of) diagnostic findings, then a somatoform disorder is suspected. A
psychological consultation is then needed to confirm the existence of a
somatoform disorder.
A serious obstacle
to diagnosing and treating somatoform disorders is the patient's entrenched
belief that there is a physical problem in the absence of findings to confirm
that belief. Thus, they are strongly resistant to a psychological interpretation
of their physical complaints.
Compounding this further is our fear that the patient may have an undiagnosed
physical problem. So we put the patient's through tests that span months if not
years before suggesting to them that there may be a psychological explanation.
Somatoform
Disorders:
Confusion of Mind
& Body: A patient believes that he/she has carpal tunnel syndrome or reflex
sympathetic dystrophy. Another patient reports that he/she has numbness or
paralysis in a limb. Another patient feels that he/she has a herniated lumbar
disc, and a fourth patient is preoccupied with pain complaints.
In all of these
examples, the physical symptoms suggest a medical condition, but in the absence
of objective clinical findings, the disorder is judged to be not physical but
Somatoform. The disorder resembles a physical problem. The patient, however,
either does not have the disorder or his/her symptoms are markedly more extreme
than would be indicated by the physical findings.
While the symptoms
in all of the Somatoform disorders cause impairment in social or occupational
functioning or create significant emotional distress, the complaints are not
fully explained by the objective physical findings. It is as though the patient
is perceiving that there is an illness or injury despite data which would
ordinarily be reassuring that the problem does not exist or is certainly less
than the patient fears.
The Disorders:
In medical
clinics, the most commonly seen of the Somatoform disorders is Somatization
Disorder. In the history of psychology, this was often referred to as "hysteria"
or "Briquet’s Syndrome." It is characterized by multiple symptoms involving
pain, gastrointestinal, sexual and pseudoneurological complaints. The complaints
begin before age 30 and extend over many years. The patient often has a complex
medical history of shopping for diagnoses and endless series of laboratory and
radiologic studies.
Hypochondriasis is
a disorder with which most people are familiar. The hypochondriacal patient is
preoccupied with the fear of having a serious disease. This preoccupation is
based upon the patient’s misinterpretation of bodily functions and despite
reassurance, the patient clings to these irrational beliefs and the consequent
repeated accessing of health care. Hypochondriasis is a somatoform disorder that
involves the preoccupation with the idea that one has a serious disease based
upon misinterpretation of bodily symptoms. Despite reassurance from
professionals that there is no disease or disorder present, the hypochondriacal
person maintains this unwarranted fear. The person is not delusional; they
realize that, indeed, there may be nothing wrong, but their preoccupying fear
that there bodily functions suggest some undiagnosed condition. Work and
relationships are disrupted by this preoccupation.
The preoccupation
may arise from minor abnormalities, misinterpretation of normal functioning or
have vague complaints which defy adequate examination. In some cases, it is the
fear of a specific problem such as heart disease, and the individual will seek
repeated confirmation from studies and examination that they are, in fact, not
ill. Some believe that between 5 and 10 percent of those seen in general
practice have symptoms of hypochondriasis. Those with good insight often are
able to understand why their fears have arisen and to resolve them. For others,
the hypochondriacal complaints may be chronic and continue without change.
Pain Disorder is a
somatoform disorder in which the predominant area of focus is painful bodily
complaints in which psychological factors are determined to be central to the
onset, severity, exacerbation or maintenance of the complaint. Pain Disorder
(like conversion disorder) is a form of somatoform disorder. However, they are
not the same. As previously noted, conversion disorder involves sensory or motor
functions and suggests a neurological disorder that does not, in fact, exist.
Pain Disorder associated with Complex Regional Pain Disorder (Type I -RSD)
Pain Disorder does
not mean that the person has no biological reason for pain. It suggests that
there are psychological factors that appear to have contributed to the onset,
severity, maintenance or exacerbation (amplification) of the pain. That is, the
individual may, indeed, have a valid reason for the pain, but the individual's
pain may be worse in association with life events and/or internal emotional
conflicts. In (somatoform) pain disorder, it is important that the patient be
assisted in determining what factors play a role in the experience of the pain.
This may include the way in which they and others respond to their complaints of
pain. In order for there to be a diagnosis of pain disorder, the pain must
disrupt social and/or occupational functioning. An example of such a disorder
would be an individual who sustains a back injury during the course of financial
difficulties arising from a divorce. Perhaps it is noted that the pain is more
severe when resolution of the divorce or the financial situation is expected of
the individual. In such a case, we would be concerned that the pain is being
amplified by these external factors.
Conversion
Disorder is a somatoform disorder that involves motor or sensory problems that
would "suggest" a neurological condition. Psychological factors, however, can be
shown to be associated with the onset or worsening of symptoms. The most
commonly seen examples are the conversion paralysis or conversion blindness in
which the patient resolves an underlying conflict ("primary gain") by the
unconscious use of the symptom(s).
There is a
somatoform disorder, however, referred to as undifferentiated somatoform
disorder in which the patient may have concurrent conversion, hypochondrical and
somatoform pain symptoms. In order to diagnose this disorder, we assume or
demonstrate that the disorder is disruptive to occupational and/or social
achievement. In each disorder, even the undifferentiated variety, we are
assuming that there is either the lack of any physical findings or that the
physical findings are insufficient to create the distress and symptoms that the
patient reports. However, since there are physical conditions whose source can
initially be obscure, consideration is always given for the potential for a
missed organic (physical) diagnosis.
Body Dysmorphic
Disorder is a somatoform disorder characterized by an imagined defect in
appearance or excessive concern or preoccupation with a slight physical defect.
The person with body dysmorphic disorder is distressed to the point where
social, occupational or academic functioning is disrupted. Patients with the
disorder are continually checking their appearance and occupy significant
periods of their days examining themselves. Others become so distressed that
they avoid examining themselves in the mirror in an attempt to decrease their
sense of distress. They may attempt camouflage and/or becoming markedly socially
avoidant.
Conscious Intent
There are two
important differentiations which must be drawn in diagnosing somatoform
disorders. The somatoform patient, unlike the patient with factitious disorder,
is not seeking to maintain themselves in the role of the patient. He/she is not
consciously aware of the psychological factors which are in operation. By
contrast the malingering patient is, like the factitious patient, consciously
creating the symptoms, but in the case of malingering, the goal is not to
maintain the role of the patient but to secure an end goal, often financial.