Somatization
Somatization
Somatization
.Jameel Adnan, MD
Community & Primary Health Care
KAAU-RABEG BRANCH
Round Map
Introduction
Somatoform disorders categories
Epidemiology
Clinical presentation
Screening
Treatment
Introduction
Introduction
Somatization disorder
o Refers to patients with a history of many physical
complaints beginning before age 30 years that occur
over a period of several years and result in treatment
being sought or significant impairment in social,
occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
o All of the following are present at any time during the
course of illness: four pain symptoms; two
gastrointestinal tract symptoms; one sexual symptom;
and one pseudoneurologic symptom.
Somatoform disorder categories
Conversion disorder
o Refers to symptoms or deficits of voluntary or sensory
function suggesting a neurologic or general medical
condition and associated with psychological factors.
o Typically there is a sudden onset of a dramatic but
physiologically impossible condition like paralysis,
aphonia, blindness, deafness, or pseudoseizures. The
presentation fits the patient's view of the disorder
rather than physiology.
o Unlike somatization disorder, patients with conversion
disorder focus upon only one symptom.
Somatoform disorder categories
Hypochondriasis
o Refers to preoccupation with the fear of having a
serious disease based on a misattribution of bodily
symptoms or normal functions
Factitious disorder
o Tends to occur in patients who have some medical
knowledge.
o Wound healing difficulty, infection, bleeding,
hypoglycemia, and gastrointestinal ailments are
common presentations.
o Munchausen syndrome,
occurs in a subgroup of patients who feign disease,
move from hospital to hospital, and submit to repeated
procedures for illness they have voluntarily
manufactured
Somatoform disorder categories
Malingering
o Malingering (ie, purposely faking symptoms) occurs
in the setting of substance abuse, antisocial
personality disorder, and legal battles over
disability, criminal prosecution, or financial
compensation. Patients will not cooperate with
diagnostic evaluation; a discrepancy between
findings and symptoms is evident.
Epidemiology
Epidemiology
True somatization disorder as defined by DSM-IV is
relatively uncommon (0.3 % one year prevalence in
the population)
The process of somatization is very common in the
general population. Over one-half of people
presenting to clinicians in an outpatient setting have
no organic disease ,and less than one-third of new
complaints have an organic disease basis
Clinical Presentation
Clinical Presentation
almost any symptom that occurs in patients with
organic pathology
Pain
Gastrointestinal symptoms
Cardiopulmonary symptoms
Pseudoneurologic symptoms
Reproductive organ symptoms
Even Syndromes
o Atypical chest pain,
o Fibromyalgia,
o Chronic fatigue syndrome,
o Premenstrual syndrome,
o Temporomandibular joint syndrome.
Screening
Screening tests