Somatic Symptoms and Related Disorders
Somatic Symptoms and Related Disorders
Somatic Symptoms and Related Disorders
Mild dissociative or somatic symptoms are experienced at least occasionally by almost all of
us. Indeed, up to 80 percent of people in the general population say that they have had
somatic (physical) symptoms in the past week (Hiller et al., 2006).
But when concern about these symptoms is severe and leads to significant distress or
impairment, a somatic symptom disorder may be diagnosed. And when feelings of “being
out of it” become so persistent and recurrent that the person has profound and unusual
memory deficits (such as not knowing who they are), the diagnosis of a dissociative disorder
may be warranted.
In the past, both somatic symptom disorders (formerly known as somatoform disorders)
and dissociative disorders were included with the various anxiety disorders (and neurotic
depression) and considered to be forms of neurosis.
Somatic symptoms and related disorders are a new category in DSM-5. The disorders in it lie
at the interface between abnormal psychology and medicine. Included in this category are
conditions that involve physical symptoms combined with abnormal thoughts, feelings, and
behaviors in response to those symptoms.
Soma means “body.” People with somatic symptom disorders experience bodily symptoms
that cause them significant psychological distress and impairment.
In DSM-IV a great deal of emphasis was placed on the idea that the symptoms were
medically unexplained. In other words, although the patient’s complaints suggested the
presence of a medical condition, no physical pathology could be found to account for them.
Affected patients have no control over their symptoms. They are also not intentionally
faking symptoms or attempting to deceive others. For the most part, they genuinely believe
something is terribly wrong with them.
Four most important disorders in the somatic symptom and related disorders category are
(1) somatic symptom disorder, (2) illness anxiety disorder, (3) conversion disorder, and (4)
factitious disorder.
It was long thought that symptoms developed as a defense mechanism against unresolved
or unacceptable unconscious conflicts. Rather than being expressed directly, psychic energy
was instead channeled into more acceptable physical problems.
Current views take a much more cognitive-behavioral approach.
The model of somatic symptom disorder:
First, there is a focus of attention on the body. In other words, the person is hyper-vigilant
and has increased awareness of bodily changes.
Second, the person tends to see bodily sensations as somatic symptoms, meaning that
physical sensations are attributed to illness.
Third, the person tends to worry excessively about what the symptoms mean and has
catastrophizing cognitions.
Fourth, because of this worry, the person is very distressed and seeks medical attention for
his or her perceived physical problems.
According to this formulation, somatic symptom disorder can be viewed as a disorder of
both perception (noticing benign sensations such as one’s heart skip a beat) and cognition
(“Does this mean I have a serious heart problem?”). Individuals who are especially anxious
about their health tend to believe that they are very aware of and sensitive to what is
happening in their bodies. But this does not seem to be the case. Rather, experimental
studies show that these individuals have an attentional bias for illness-related information.
In other words, top-down (cognitive) processes, rather than bottom-up processes (such as
differences in bodily sensations), seem to account for the problems that they have.
Although their physical sensations probably do not differ from those of normal controls,
people with somatic symptoms disorders seem to focus excessive attention on their
physical experiences, labeling physical sensations as symptoms. They also perceive their
symptoms as more dangerous than they really are and judge a particular disease to be more
likely or dangerous than it really is. They also perceive their probability of being able to cope
with the illness as extremely low. All this tends to create a vicious cycle in which their
anxiety about illness and symptoms results in physiological symptoms of anxiety, which
then provide further fuel for their convictions that they are ill. It is also believed that an
individual’s past experiences with illnesses (in both him- or herself and others, and also as
observed in the media) contribute to the development of a set of dysfunctional assumptions
about symptoms and diseases that may predispose a person to develop a somatic symptom
disorder.
Simplified Model of Somatic Symptom Disorder
People with somatic symptom disorder tend to have a cognitive style that leads them to be
hypersensitive to their bodily sensations. They also experience these sensations as intense, disturbing,
and highly aversive. Another characteristic of such patients is that they tend to think catastrophically
about their symptoms, often overestimating the medical severity of their condition.
Negative affect is regarded as a risk factor for developing somatic symptom disorder.
However, the negative affect alone is not sufficient. Many people tend to be rather gloomy
in their personalities, but only a subset of these people will also be habitual reporters of
physical symptoms.
Other characteristics that may be important are absorption and alexithymia.
Absorption is a tendency to become absorbed in one’s experiences and is often associated
with being highly hypnotizable.
Alexithymia, on the other hand, refers to having difficulties identifying one’s feelings.
People who report many symptoms but who do not have any medical conditions tend to
score high on all of these traits.
Although somatic symptom disorders are often accompanied by a lot of misery and
suffering, they may be maintained to some degree by secondary reinforcements. Most of us
learn as children that when we are sick, we get special comforts and attention, as well as
being excused from school or other responsibilities.
People with hypochondriasis also tend to have an excessive amount of illness in their
families while growing up, which may lead to strong memories of being sick or in pain and
perhaps of having observed some of the secondary benefits that sick people sometimes get.
Having said this, it is important to keep in mind that people with somatic symptom
disorders are not malingering (consciously faking symptoms to achieve a specific goal such
as winning a personal injury lawsuit).
Conversion Disorder
• The prevalence of the disorder in the general population remains unknown, but the diagnosis
is reported in about 5% of patients referred to neurology clinics (APA, 2013).
• Like dissociative identity disorder, conversion disorder is linked in many cases to a history of
childhood trauma or abuse (Sobot et al., 2012).
• According to the DSM, conversion symptoms mimic neurological or general medical
conditions involving problems with voluntary motor (movement) or sensory. Historically this
disorder was one of several disorders that were grouped together under the term hysteria.
DSM-5 CRITERIA
A. One or more symptoms of altered voluntary motor or sensory function.
B. Clinical findings provide evidence of incompatibility between the symptom and recognized
neurological or medical conditions.
C. The symptom or deficit is not better explained by another medical or mental disorder. D.
The symptom or deficit causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social,
occupational, or other important areas of functioning or warrants medical evaluation.
SYMPTOMS/ETIOLOGY:
In describing the clinical picture of conversion disorder, it is useful to think in terms of four
categories of symptoms:
(1) sensory:
Today the sensory symptoms or deficits are most often in the visual system (especially
blindness and tunnel vision), in the auditory system (especially deafness), or in the
sensitivity to feeling (especially the anesthesias).
In the anesthesias, the person loses her or his sense of feeling in a part of the body. One
of the most common is glove anesthesia, in which the person cannot feel anything on the
hand in the area where gloves are worn, although the loss of sensation usually makes no
anatomical sense.
With conversion blindness, the person reports that he or she cannot see and yet can
often navigate about a room without bumping into furniture or other objects.
With conversion deafness, the person reports not being able to hear and yet orients
appropriately upon “hearing” his or her own name.
Such observations lead to obvious questions: In conversion blindness (and deafness), can
affect people actually not see (or hear), or is the sensory information received but
screened from consciousness? In general, the evidence supports the idea that the
sensory input is registered but is somehow screened from explicit conscious recognition
(explicit perception).
(2) motor:
conversion paralysis is usually confined to a single limb such as an arm or a leg, and the
loss of function is usually selective for certain functions. For example, a person may not
be able to write but may be able to use the same muscles for scratching, or a person may
not be able to walk most of the time but may be able to walk in an emergency such as a
fire where escape is important.
The most common speech-related conversion disturbance is aphonia, in which a person
is able to talk only in a whisper although he or she can usually cough in a normal manner.
(In true, organic laryngeal paralysis, both the cough and the voice are affected.)
Another common motor symptom, called Globus, involves the sensation of a lump in the
throat
(3) seizures:
Another relatively common form of conversion symptom involves seizures. These
resemble epileptic seizures, although they are not true seizures. patients with conversion
seizures often show excessive thrashing about and writhing not seen with true seizures,
and they rarely injure themselves in falls or lose bowel or bladder control as patients
with true seizures frequently do.
CAUSES:
FACTITIOUS DISORDER:
In factitious disorder, patients may surreptitiously alter their own physiology—for example,
by taking drugs—in order to simulate various real illnesses. Indeed, they may be at risk for
serious injury or death and may even need to be committed to an institution for their own
protection.
A dangerous variant of factitious disorder is a factitious disorder imposed on another
(sometimes referred to as Munchausen’s syndrome by proxy).
Here, the person seeking medical help has intentionally produced a medical or psychiatric
illness (or the appearance of an illness) in another person. This person is usually someone
(such as a child) who is under his or her care (e.g., Pankratz, 2006).
In a typical instance, a mother presents her own child for treatment for a medical condition
she has deliberately caused. To produce symptoms, the mother might withhold food from
the child, add blood to the child’s urine, give the child drugs to make him or her throw up,
or heat up thermometers to make it seem as if the child has a fever. If the child is
hospitalized, the mother might deliberately infect an intravenous (IV) line to make the child
more ill.
Of course, the health of the victims is often seriously endangered by this form of child abuse
and the intervention of social service agencies or law enforcement is sometimes necessary.
In as many as 10 percent of cases, the actions of the mother may lead to a child’s death.
This disorder may be suspected when the victim’s clinical presentation is atypical, when lab
results are inconsistent with each other or with recognized diseases, or when there are
many frequent returns or increasingly urgent visits to the same hospital or clinic.
DISTINGUISHING BETWEEN DIFFERENT TYPES OF SOMATIC DISORDERS