Abnormal Psychology | Chapter 10: Disorders featuring Somatic Symptoms
Somatic Symptom Disorder
1. Person experiences at least one upsetting or repeatedly disruptive physical (somatic) symptom 2. Person experiences an unreasonable number of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors regarding the nature or implications of the physical symptoms, including one of the following: a. Repeated, excessive thoughts about their seriousness b. Continual high anxiety about their nature or health implications c. Disproportionate amounts of time and energy spent on the symptoms or their health implications 3. Physical symptoms usually continue to some degree (less dramatic than conversion disorder) for more than 6 months
Illness Anxiety Disorder
1. Person is preoccupied with thoughts about having or getting a significant illness. In reality, person has no or, at most, mild somatic symptoms 2. Person has easily triggered, high anxiety about health 3. Person displays unduly high number of health-related behaviors (ex. keeps focusing on body) or dysfunctional health-avoidance behaviors (ex. avoids doctors) 4. Person's concerns continue to some degree for at least 6 months
Traditional Psychophysiological Disorders
ulcers, asthma, insomnia, muscle contractions, tension headaches, migraine headaches, hypertension, coronary heart disease
Conversion Disorder
1. Presence of at least one symptom or deficit that affects voluntary or sensory function (ex. paralysis, blindness, loss of feeling, etc.) 2. Symptoms are found to be inconsistent with known neurological or medical disease 3. Significant distress or impairment
Primary gain
When bodily symptoms keep a patient's internal conflicts out of awareness ex. a man who has an underlying fear about expressing anger may develop a conversion paralysis of the arm, thus preventing his fears of rage from reaching consciousness
Factitious disorder
1. False creation of physical or psychological symptoms, or deceptive production of injury or disease, even without external rewards for such ailments 2. Presentation of oneself as ill, damaged, or hurt
Factitious disorder Imposed on Another
1. False creation of physical or psychological symptoms, or deceptive production of injury or disease, in another person, even without external rewards for such ailments 2. Presentation of another person (victim) as ill, damaged, or hurt
Psychological Factors Affecting Other Medical Conditions
1. The presence of a medical condition 2. Psychological factors negatively affect the medical condition by: a. Affecting the course of the medical condition b. Providing obstacles for the treatment of the medical condition c. Posing new health risks d. Triggering or worsening the medical condition
Glove anesthesia
A conversion disorder symptom where the entire hand, extending from the fingertips to the wrist, becomes numb; real neurological damage works differently
Factitious Disorder
A disorder in which a person feigns or induces physical symptoms, typically for the purpose of assuming the role of a sick person; the motivation for assuming the sick role may be the role itself
Type A Personality style
A personality pattern characterized by hostility, cynicism, drivenness, impatience, competitiveness, and ambition
Type B Personality style
A personality pattern in which a person is more relaxed, less aggressive, and less concerned about time
Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy
Also known as Factitious disorder Imposed on Another
Munchausen syndrome
Commonly known as factitious disorder
Briquet's Syndrome
Commonly known as somatization pattern
Secondary gain
When a patient's somatic symptoms further enables him/her to avoid unpleasant activities or receive sympathy from others ex. conversion paralysis allows a soldier to avoid combat duty
Hypochondriasis
Illness anxiety disorder was previously known as what?
Malingering
The act of intentionally feigning illness to achieve some external gain
Psychoneuroimmunology
The area of study that ties stress and illness to the body's immune system
Somatization Pattern
The individual experiences a large and varied number of bodily symptoms; they experience long-lasting physical ailments that typically have littler or no physical basis. Often includes pain symptoms, gastrointestinal symptoms, sexual symptoms, and neurological-type symptoms. Can last for many years
Predominant Pain Pattern
The person's primary bodily problem is the experience of pain