Health Anxiety, and Illness Related Psychological Distress | Somatic Symptom Disorders | DSM 5 TR

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hy46OtDsjpI
Hello everybody and welcome to this week’s ceu  class on health anxiety and illness related   psychological distress in the dsm this is  the category of somatic symptom disorders   i’m your host dr donnelly snipes in this  presentation you’re going to learn about  
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the category of somatic symptom disorders in the  dsm-5tr we’ll explore the diagnostic criteria   for the disorders in this category as outlined  in the dsm-5tr and identify risk factors and   co-occurring issues as identified in the dsm-5-tr  as well as in clinical research i.e from pubmed
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of the disorders in the somatic symptom disorder  section are focused mainly on somatic symptoms or   illness anxiety although in the dsm-5 they tried  to more effectively differentiate the disorders   there is still a great deal of overlap  and you’ll see that when we get in there  
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interestingly the dsm notes that non-psychiatric  physicians and mental health clinicians   found the dsm-4 diagnostic criteria  difficult to apply which is why they   revised it in the dsm-5 by reducing the  number of disorders and sub-categories  
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so in the dsm-4 it was even harder to  differentiate and differentially diagnose   it’s important to remember that many mental  disorders initially present with primarily   physical or somatic symptoms and in some cultures  that somatic presentation may always predominate  
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previous criteria for somatic symptom disorders  over emphasized the importance of symptoms being   unexplained by a physiological exam it is noted  in the dsm 5tr that it is not appropriate to give   an individual a mental disorder diagnosis solely  because there is a lack of physiological findings  
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that is an important note that we need to  remember when making these diagnoses risk   factors for somatic symptom disorders include  genetic and biological vulnerabilities that cause   differential pain perception well that makes  sense when somebody is more sensitive to pain  
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or less reactive to pain it can present as  different symptoms neurological disorders or   chronic pain issues or somatic symptoms trauma is  also a risk factor for somatic symptom disorders   if you’ll remember from other presentations  vanderkulk has said repeatedly that a lot of times  
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trauma is remembered in the body it’s remembered  as a somatic sensation not necessarily as a an   overt memory additionally people who are in  situations in which the sick role is reinforced   may be more likely to present with somatic  illnesses as well as situations in which  
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there is not any reinforcement for mental  health presentations of distress again in   some cultures and even in some families mental  distress is ignored minimized pathologized and   somatic symptoms or physical symptoms are the  only thing that is recognized and considered  
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a valid complaint so the presentation may  of mental illness or mental health issues   may vary based on culture and family acceptance  of mental health symptoms differences in   cultural expectations and explanations  for physical symptoms or somatic symptoms  
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and the differences in the management of symptoms  may also be a risk factor or a differentiating   factor for diagnosis of somatic symptom disorder  so let’s talk about somatic symptom disorder and   it is obviously the primary disorder in this  category that is titled somatic symptom disorders  
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in somatic symptom disorder the person has  to have one or more physical symptoms that   result in clinically significant  distress okay that’s pretty broad criteria number two they must exhibit  excessive thoughts feelings or behaviors  
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related to the physical symptom now  excessive is what differentiates it from   quote normal or expected anxiety or behaviors  and there is no objective definition of excessive   the excessive thoughts or feelings or behaviors  can be characterized by one or more of the  
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following a disproportionate persistent thought  about the seriousness of the illness so if   somebody has i have a strong history of cancer in  my family particularly melanoma so i’m regularly   checking my my freckles and my moles um now if i  were disproportionately obsessed with you know oh  
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this mole looks a little strange and it suddenly  consumed what i was doing then that might qualify   persistently high level of anxiety about the  symptoms so if i had a lot of anxiety about   the fact that you know some of my moles  are slightly different colors or whatever  
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that could also be a symptom but again it has  to be excessive and who defines excessive that’s   one of the things we’re going to talk about and  finally excessive time and energy is devoted to   these symptoms or concerns so let’s switch gears  you know cancer is something people worry about  
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viruses or something people worry about but  menopause hot flashes okay that is a physical   symptom that can result in clinically significant  distress if you’ve ever had hot flashes you know   it can wake you up in the middle of  the night hot flashes can be really  
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um disruptive to your life and they’re real  they they exist a lot of times when you have   hot flashes your heart is also racing a little bit  it can increase up to 20 beats a minute they say   a person may spend a lot of time and energy trying  to figure out what can i do to control these  
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hot flashes so i can sleep through the freaking  night and they’re looking at different mattresses   and different solutions and they’re looking at  different herbs and consulting different doctors   is that excessive when the physical symptoms  are preventing them from being able to sleep  
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i’m not saying one way or another however  i think it’s important for us to consider   what is the impact the symptom is having on the  person and how much is it the symptom itself   being um functionally disruptive for them and as  a result of that is the time and energy devoted to  
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the concerned or alleviating the concerns  excessive it may not be we need to be really   really careful about pathologizing people’s  desire to have a reasonable quality of life   and finally for the diagnostic criteria although  any particular symptom may not be continuously  
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present the person exhibits symptoms continuously  for at least six months so they may have   disproportionate or persistent thoughts about the  seriousness of a variety of different concerns or   persist persistently high levels of anxiety about  a variety of symptoms that they’re experiencing  
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or they may spend excessive time and energy  devoted to a variety of different symptoms and   you know for those of you who are older you know  as you get older you seem to break a little bit   more and there is a and younger people who  are going through growth spurts may have  
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um aches and pains and changes that uh vary  over the course of several months so we do   want to consider you know what’s going  on and is this excessive for the person somatic symptom disorder can be diagnosed  with or without a medical explanation and  
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i’m going to spend most of the time in this  presentation on somatic symptom disorder since   it is the primary diagnosis and the one with  the most research behind it in this category but   so somatic symptom disorder can develop in  somebody after they’ve had a heart attack they may  
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be hyper vigilant to signs of another heart attack  well that kind of makes sense now we want to look   at is there concern and is are there feelings  about this fear about having another heart attack   is it disruptive to their life and you know it’s  really this is where it kind of starts getting  
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really dicey to differentially diagnose  between somatic symptom disorder and   anxiety um and illness related anxiety  but i digress superventricular tachycardia   is another one of those things it’s  kind of like when you take your car  
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to the mechanic and there’s this sporadic squeak  or issue that you’re having the mechanic can’t   find it so they said there’s nothing wrong  it’s you know all in your head svt is one   of those that we’re going to talk about that is  really difficult a lot of times for doctors to  
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catch because it occurs so sporadically you can  have multiple in a day and then go weeks or months   without having one supraventricular  tachycardia is when your heart rate goes from   normal for you to all of a sudden just jumping  up to you know 170 180 200 and it feels like it’s  
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going to pound out of your chest and it hurts  so supraventricular tachycardia is one of those   that people may be more hyper vigilant about after  they’ve had an episode because it’s terrifying   but it’s also one that is often dismissed  by doctors that say well if it resets on  
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its own it’s not a big deal well what  happens if it doesn’t reset on its own   if somebody has had a death of a loved one  from fill in the blank cancer heart attack   stroke whatever then they may become more  hyper vigilant when they have similar symptoms  
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i already talked about menopause that can  be something that comes on and it comes on   at different ages for different people but it  can cause a variety of physiological symptoms   that may be disruptive to the person’s  life that they may spend a lot of time  
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trying to figure out how to manage the virus and  i can’t say the c word because the youtube algos   would like completely lose their ever-loving mind  but getting sick with a virus can be uh can also   prompt somatic symptom disorder or health anxiety  or i’m sorry they call it illness anxiety um
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in people when they start getting a sniffly nose  they start thinking oh my gosh i must have this   virus when they have a cough that’s sort of  quote unexplained they may worry about it   especially when that particular disorder whatever  it is is regularly presented to the people  
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and there are a lot of diffuse  symptoms that can characterize it then it can become easier for people to  develop somatic symptom disorder and become   hyper vigilant to a lot of those symptoms oh do  i have a headache oh i wonder what that means  
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fibromyalgia and pots fibromyalgia was actually  initially identified in 1904 but it wasn’t   recognized by the american college of rheumatology  until 1990 pots postural orthostatic tachycardia   syndrome was originally identified i believe in  1984 i had the reference later in the presentation  
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but there are a lot of doctors that still don’t  believe that it truly exists now interestingly   enough fibromyalgia and pots both have clinically  identifiable symptoms in fibromyalgia it’s through   an mri and through blood tests and pots  there’s a variety of other tests that can  
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identify whether somebody meets criteria but  despite that for the longest time fibromyalgia was   dismissed as being something that was not a  real diagnosis now that now we know it is and   you know potts is still trying to  establish itself despite there being  
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clinical centers of excellence like the one  at vanderbilt that are actively studying it   chronic fatigue is another one of those syndromes  or issues that people can have that has long been   pathologized if you will and stigmatized  because it’s what they call a diagnosis of  
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exclusion there is no test for chronic  fatigue it’s just a person who presents with   a certain set of symptoms that aren’t explained  by anything else must have chronic fatigue hyperparathyroid and this one um i bring  up specifically because i have known a  
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couple of people who’ve had it and it has gone  they’ve gone years without it being diagnosed   but people with hyperparathyroid may experience  fatigue and depressive like symptoms as well as   quote according to the mayo clinic frequent  complaints of illness with no apparent cause  
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so this is another one that often probably got  pushed off as a mental health issue when in   actuality there was a an actual dysfunction within  the hyperparathyroid gland oh my gosh and both of   these people once they had their hyperparathyroid  gland removed they were asymptomatic imagine that  
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and then i did find another article that  was interesting that indicated that ptsd   uh often has a lot of somatic symptoms quote  somatic symptoms are ubiquitous especially are   a ubiquitous aspect of the clinical presentation  of ptsd therefore we need to recognize  
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that people with ptsd often have somatic  symptoms now that’s not really highlighted a lot   in the diagnostic criteria so a lot of times  people with ptsd and concurrent somatic symptoms   or people with depression and concurrent somatic  symptoms are given somatic symptom disorder  
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diagnosis in addition to the other uh in addition  to the other diagnosis because the mind-body   dualism is still not really well integrated in  the dsm 66 to 75 percent of people who previously   were diagnosed with hypochondriasis i know  that’s like dr dragging your fingernails down  
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a blackboard to hear it are now diagnosed  with somatic symptom disorder the rest are   diagnosed with illness anxiety hypochondriasis is  no longer a diagnosis in the dsm-5 or the dsm-5tr a distinct characteristic of people with somatic  symptom disorder is not the somatic symptoms per  
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se but instead the way they present or interpret  them they may have a symptom which is either   a normal bodily symptom or a what many people  would consider a minor pain or a minor symptom   and they are perceiving it as far more dangerous  and intense now that can be for a variety of  
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reasons part of it could be because of perceptual  differences and i really didn’t find much on   the comorbidity of somatic symptom disorder  and other mental health issues that involve   sensory differences like autism spectrum  disorders or adhd but i would wonder if  
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there’s a higher comorbidity there in those  especially in those that are hypersensitive   to sensory stimulation i’m just hypothesizing  however the fact that we even say that it’s not   the symptom that’s the problem it’s  the way that you’re interpreting it  
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often causes invalidation of the person the  doctors often say it’s all in your head or   you’re overreacting well how invalidating is that  how hopeless and helpless do i feel if i’ve got   this chronic symptom that is impairing my  quality of life and my medical providers
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talk to me like i’m an idiot you know  that’s very invalidating so a lot of people   who receive that reception from their physician  often go to the internet to try to self-diagnose   and self-treat their issues anybody who’s  gone on the internet to try to self-diagnose  
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knows that the information out there  varies widely in credibility and it   very easily promotes catastrophic  perceptions you know you can go to just about   um like on mayo clinic or webmd and look up just  about any symptom and under each one of them  
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it will say there’s a small chance that it  could be cancer okay so then the person that   has somatic symptom disorder or health related  anxiety now they have that in their head and   it becomes terrifying for them so a lot of  times ins by invalidating and dismissing  
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patients doctors are actually increasing  the severity of their their anxiety and   their hyper vigilance towards symptoms well what  does this do aside from create more mental health   and dysphoria it keeps that hpa axis excessively  triggered and we know when that happens that
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increased cortisol and persistently can lead  to increased inflammation and can start causing   dysfunction and other bodily  symptoms so not only is invalidating patients perceptions increasing their  their mental health issues it’s also  
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probably increasing their physical health issues somatic symptom disorder that occurs with  other mental health issues often results   in more functional impairment  and more difficulty in treatment
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the more symptoms that are there the more systems  that are probably involved and feeding off of each   other so as one symptom or one condition gets  worse it probably worsens the other conditions   likewise when one symptom starts getting better  hopefully it also improves the other symptoms  
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the more category b symptoms  of somatic symptom disorder   that is the more they perseverate on the  seriousness of the disorder the more they   have anxiety about having the disorder  and the more time and energy they spend  
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trying to address the disorder likely the  more severe the somatic symptom disorder is   people with somatic symptom disorder have  a high frequency of medical visits which   rarely alleviate their concerns and it even  states in the dsm that a lot of times doctors  
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are very dismissive and invalidating  of people’s presentation additionally the people may get to a doctor that says okay  well we can try to treat you with this if the   treatment doesn’t work then the person feels  helpless and hopeless and sometimes the doctor  
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says well if that was the problem that treatment  should have worked so that must not be the problem   ergo it must be all in your head and not all  doctors do this you know i do want to emphasize   the fact that there are good doctors out there  but unfortunately this happens my experience um  
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and with personally and with friends and  family this happens more often than not   there was a 2015 article  that was relatively scathing   about the somatic symptom disorder and it  said the new dsm-5 this was before the tr  
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somatic symptom disorder over psychologizes  chronic pain it has low sensitivity and   specificity and contributes to misdiagnosis and  stigma so think about people with fibromyalgia who up until recently were falling through  the cracks it was i believe in 2017
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maybe a 2007. i can’t remember right offhand  but very very recently they recognized that a   lot of people with fibromyalgia were not  getting diagnosed because the criteria   were actually too restrictive so they changed  the criteria now all those people that quote fell  
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through the cracks actually had fibromyalgia and  were denied treatment because it was considered   they were considered to have it as a somatic  symptom issue or something else who knows   so i think it’s really important that we take  people’s perceptions of their physical symptoms  
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very very seriously we may not understand it we  may not see it but it’s important to recognize how   it impacts their quality of life and recognize  that we don’t know every disorder that exists   like i said pots just recently started being  diagnosed you know compared to other things um  
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and are being identified back when i was in high  school you know to kind of put it into perspective associated features of somatic symptom disorder  catastrophic interpretation of normal bodily   sensations when somebody has a sensation they  think oh my gosh this is it this is the big one
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my grandmother when after my grandfather died  now they had been married for 50 plus years and   they had a very traditional marriage where he took  care of things she took care of the house when he   passed on all of the stuff that he did fell onto  her and it wasn’t something that she was used to  
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so she had high levels of anxiety and occasionally  would have a vasovagal response and fall out   and her interpretation of what was going on was  it was the good lord calling her up to heaven you   know that was her catastrophic interpretation  of the symptoms of the heart palpitations that  
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were going on and it was important to examine  everything that was going on because this was   really more a grief and anxiety and anxiety  issue for her because she felt overwhelmed   with everything that was going on and was  perpetually stressed out not sleeping well  
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but i digress associated features also include a  self-con concept of bodily weakness they perceive   themselves as more frail and more likely to  get sick intolerance of physical symptoms a lot of us i would venture to say that most  everyone has awakened at some point and they’ve  
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had a kink in their neck from sleeping wrong  or they have back pain and they’re not really   sure where it came from they just wake up  and it’s there or they suddenly get this   ringing in their ears and instead of looking at  the most likely explanation did i lift something  
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wrong did i sleep wrong they cannot  tolerate that symptom and they start   on this you know fast track of catastrophic  explanations for what’s going on negative affect   including a sense of hopelessness and helplessness  and quote demoralization straight from the dsm  
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5tr the person feels hopeless and hopeless that’s  a primary description of a depressive symptom   and they may feel demoralized they may feel like  they’re not believed they may feel like nobody’s   there to help them unsupported because they are  regularly being invalidated typically people with  
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somatic symptom disorders present in a medical  setting because they’re concerned about guess what   a physical symptom you don’t go to a psychologist  if you’ve got you know a physical symptom   reassurance by medical professionals and attempts  to refocus the person’s concerns proves futile  
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and this is important but it is not remember it  is not a diagnostic feature it’s just associated   the reassurance you know the person may have  gone to other doctors before and been reassured   that hey it’s no big deal you don’t need to worry  about it but they can’t explain what’s causing it  
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or the symptoms getting worse or the symptom is  causing them clinically significant impairment and   functioning yet they can’t get any um validation  from profession from their professionals to date   so going to the current professional  they may say well you know i only have  
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a mild belief that this person can  be helpful but i’ll try again anyway and attempts to refocus the person’s concerns  prove futile when you’re being told that   okay yes you have this symptom but  it’s not that big of a deal you need to  
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turn your attention to you know stop it stop  ruminating about it instead of focusing on what’s   causing it you need to focus on stop ruminating  that can feel extremely invalidating as well the prevalence according to the  dsm-5 tr is 7 to 17 percent now  
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looking on line looking in pubmed  there were actually very few uh   research articles that i found that looked at the  prevalence in a in the general population there   were some that looked at the prevalence in medical  students some that looked at the prevalence in um
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very very specific   subgroups but finding accurate data about  the prevalence in the general population was not there you know except for what is  stated in the dsm so i’m not sure where  
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those numbers came from but those are the  numbers still 17 that’s almost one in five   so it’s important to recognize  that that’s a pretty high number   it says that somatic symptom disorders are higher  in women and you know i tend to take issue with  
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that because of the stigma associated with it  what many women perceive when they hear that is   just like when they hear that prevalence  of anxiety disorders is higher in women   they hear that the perception is that  females may present in ways that are more  
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to use the old term um hypochondriacal if  that’s even a correct conjugation of it   however there are some interesting things  that they don’t point out and there are some   interesting things to consider in today’s  day and age with p a lot of people that are  
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undergoing gender reassignment procedures  testosterone seems to be unrelated to pain   perception okay so that’s interesting however  estrogens and progesterone significantly impact   not only pain perception but also serotonin levels  this is something that is really important for  
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us to recognize for people who are biologically  female as well as for people who are transitioning   to female because the addition of  estrogens and progesterone may impact their   some of their physiological symptoms estrogens  also directly interact with cardiac function  
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okay well so let’s think about this  when estrogen is high people tend to   have more quote anxiety symptoms heart  racing shallow breathing clammy hands   high levels of estrogens are associated more with  activation of that hpa axis and again that cardiac  
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function heart heart beating a lot of people  with somatic symptom disorders have symptoms   that are related to either pain or heart function  so estrogen alterations may impact the symptoms   therefore i think it’s important that we make sure  that the person has had a uh physiological workup  
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not only for estrogens but also to look for  imbalances and things like high thyroid um   to assess if there are any underlying thyroid  uh um any underlying hormone conditions that   may be contributing to the somatic symptoms that  aren’t readily apparent elevated cyclic estrogens  
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are associated with somatic symptoms that are  common to many mental disorders there is evidence   that changes in estrogen levels may precipitate  certain symptoms and people who have   um irregular hormone cycles which can be  influenced by disrupted circadian rhythms  
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may have seemingly unpredictable symptom onsets  but it would be interesting to correlate them with hormone levels both gonadal and testosterone  or i’m sorry gonadal and thyroid   additionally research indicates that our  distinct sex hormone actions between the sexes  
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play a critical role in the cns functioning so  the people who are of different biological genders   um or or who have differential levels of  hormones and there wasn’t any research   that i found on people who are undergoing uh  gender reassignment so i’m i’m speculating here  
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may have altered sensory perceptions may have  altered sensations of pain and cardiac rhythm   and things like that so it would be interesting  to explore whether it’s the way the body is   wired you know so those who are biologically  assigned female and biologically assigned male  
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will always act differently or whether that  changes when hormone levels are rebalanced to the   identified gender so just  things things that i think about   children as young as five have evidence limiting  somatic complaints especially stomach ache  
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headache fatigue and nausea now what do we what do  we know about this uh the research has indicated   that it’s highly comorbid with depression and  anxiety in adolescents okay so adolescents who   have high levels of anxiety or depression often  have stomach aches headaches fatigue and nausea  
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well aren’t those kind of part and parcel  of depression and anxiety just a question   and in young children somatic symptoms were  highly correlated with parental accommodation   so the more the parents accommodated the  symptoms the more prevalent the symptoms became  
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the more the parents focused on the symptoms  the more the child focused on the symptoms   the course of the illness is impacted by  age at onset level of impairment comorbidity   whether comorbidity with physical or mental  health issues harm avoidance if the person is um  
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afraid that they’ve got a problem then that  harm avoidance that fear of having to face   uh a problem maybe make it more difficult to  treat and increase the severity rumination and   negative affect which are both associated with the  personality characteristic of quote neuroticism  
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can also negatively impact the outcome the more  the person ruminates on it and stresses about   it the worse it can get the more that hpa axis  stays activated the more inflammation the more cis   systemic dysregulation the person’s going to  experience cooperativeness also obviously if  
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they’re treatment compliant then um the course  is probably going to be different than if they’re   treatment non-compliant health literacy  also impacts the development if people are able to understand the multiplicity of causes  of different symptoms and not just focus on the  
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one catastrophic thing that can actually help so  if they had a loved one for example who died of   a heart attack or of can’t cancer yes that could  be something that could happen but what else could   cause that symptom in you a healthy individual a  person who’s health literate is able to evaluate  
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the options more effectively than somebody who  just says oh this symptom means this diagnosis   access to medical services also contributes to the  development in course if the person does not have   access to adequate helpful medical services  then they may have symptoms that are perpetual  
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and they don’t know what’s causing them or how  to fix it and prior health care experiences if   they’ve been poor then the person is more likely  going to be distrustful of future providers somatic symptom disorder is under diagnosed in  older adults because the worry is often considered  
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understandable well so maybe the worry is  understandable does it mean we need to be   diagnosing everybody who worries about  symptoms in a level that we perceive   as excessive is there an opportunity for  quality of life improvement even if their  
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symptoms are perceived as understandable that’s  something that we really need to look at do we   need to wait until they meet dsm criteria  for something before we try to help people   improve their quality of life or manage  their symptoms cultural stigma related to  
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mental health diagnosis partially explains  differences in somatic symptom reporting   some cultures have what they call idioms of  distress that are misunderstood by many providers   so they may be um downplayed and or ignored and  other times there are cultural explanations that
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mean the person is is not going  to be reporting the same symptoms burnout for example is one of  those cultural explanations   punishment for doing something bad some cultures  believe that illnesses are are a result or a  
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punishment for doing something bad other cultures  may believe that people’s presenting symptoms   are a result of imbalance between the hot and the  cold or the damp and the dry the yin and the yang so it’s important to recognize how people  explain things and understand what they’re  
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trying to communicate somatic symptom disorder has  a higher level of suicidal ideation and attempts   due to comorbidity with mood disorders well  i don’t know about you but if i’ve had this   symptom that is disruptive to my life to my  sleep to my ability to do things and the medical  
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providers keep telling me there’s nothing they  can do there’s no underlying cause for it it’s all   in my head or i’m exaggerating how bad it is then  yeah i’m gonna start to feel hopeless and helpless   and the impact of that symptom may be such and  the worry about that symptom may be such that it  
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starts disrupting sleep which contributes  to fatigue and difficulty concentrating   and you can see how very easily someone  could also develop comorbid depression and   perception of the cause of the symptoms is  also linked to increased suicidal ideation  
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if people think that oh my gosh this symptom  means that i’ve got this terminal illness   or i’ve got this illness that i refuse  to live with then they may be more likely   to take matters into their own hands so we do need  to understand people’s perception of what’s going  
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on and how it’s going to impact their quality  of life and their sense of personal control now illness anxiety disorder we’re moving on  from somatic symptom disorder there are a couple   others in this chapter that are have very minimal  information on them illness anxiety disorder  
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is diagnosed when the individual performs  excessive health-related behaviors   like frequent checking of you know moles  or heart rate or blood pressure or whatever   extreme lifestyle alterations or intensive ongoing  research about a particular symptom or disorder  
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or exhibit maladaptive avoidance of  medical care so they may be either all   in and trying to figure out what it is or  they may be all out going yeah this might   be really bad so i don’t want to know and i  refuse to go seek medical a medical opinion  
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illness anxiety is present for at least six  months but the specific illness may change   and it’s not better explained by another  mental disorder according to the dsm-5 tr preoccupation with having or acquiring  a serious illness is a mainstay  
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of illness anxiety disorder and the  somatic symptoms are not present   or and this is where it starts to get dicey  if present they are only mild in intensity   if a medical condition is present or there’s a  high risk for developing a medical condition like  
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a strong family history the preoccupation  is clearly excessive or disproportionate   thinking about somebody who’s had a family  member that died of cancer or heart disease   and they have a strong family history you know  it’s not just one person it’s like the whole  
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family is there preoccupation or concern about the  issue excessive or disproportionate who’s to make   that decision and that’s really where we need to  work with the the patient if the patient considers   it disproportionate okay you know let’s work with  that however i think we get into very gray area  
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ethically when we start telling people how how  valid it is their the intensity of their worry   there’s a high level of anxiety and  hyper vigilance about their health   so all of these things have  to be there they have to  
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do the frequent checking they have to have  a preoccupation with having or acquiring an   illness they have to have it for at least six  months and it’s not explained by a another medical   condition and there has to be a high level  of anxiety and hyper vigilance about health
00:45:11
now not in the dsm so this isn’t part of the  diagnostic criteria but it’s also interesting to   consider health anxiety by proxy and this is when  a parent caregiver loved one becomes so focused   on the symptoms of their child or loved one  that they start having all of these other  
00:45:39
meeting all of these other criteria and  they want a doctor to diagnose their child   so there is the health anxiety by proxy this  is very different than munch houses by proxy   in which there is a clear issue that’s going  on a clear physiological problem but health  
00:45:57
anxiety by proxy is not in the dsm however it is  a something that does present more often than not um illness uh anxiety disorder the prevalence in  the dsm-5tr is between one and ten percent not   finding a lot of information in pubmed that gives  us any other reference for how prevalent it is  
00:46:30
the development in course there was  virtually no information although they   did mention it was rare in children the  risk factors include a history of abuse   serious illness in self or parent during childhood  if the child remember children think dichotomously  
00:46:49
all good all bad all healthy all sick and if  the loved one experienced a serious illness in   childhood then that child probably associated  that symptom with catastrophic consequences   so we can see that that schema that was  developed may be outdated but we can see  
00:47:13
how it develops and again the history of abuse may  be somaticized they may be having that traumatic   memory come out as a physiological reaction as  opposed to an overt visual or or verbal memory   culture related issues to um illness anxiety  disorder are unknown the functional consequences  
00:47:40
the only thing the dsm identifies is that it  interferes with relationships and work performance   i would argue that it interferes with a whole  lot more than that if people have a high level   of illness and anxiety and they’re seeing a lot  of doctors it’s going to impact them financially  
00:47:58
physically that anxiety is likely going to impact  their ability to get good quality sleep it’s going   to impact their energy levels it’s going to  impact their immunity as that hpa axis stays   activated as that anxiety level stays high  cortisol loses its ability as an anti-inflammatory  
00:48:22
and we start seeing pro-inflammatory cytokines  being secreted a lot more frequently so we’re   going to start seeing um increased problems  in various health functions if you will   affectively people with illness anxiety disorder  may have anger they may have guilt they may have  
00:48:47
grief they may have depression cognitively when  you’re not getting good sleep when you’re stressed   out all the time when your brain cells are bathed  in stress hormones it is really hard to think   clearly make decisions problem solve do all those  things that help us function throughout the day  
00:49:07
and interpersonally you know the dsm did note that  so i really emphasize and encourage you to think   about the person as a biopsychosocial being  and the impact that these conditions either   directly or indirectly may have on a person’s  quality of life functional neurological symptom  
00:49:33
disorder also known as conversion disorder one  or more symptoms of altered sensory function or   voluntary motor function there are no supporting  medical findings so the person may be mute   or may not be able to lift an arm or may  not be able to hear or see but there’s  
00:49:51
no neurological explanation for it the mri  comes back clear it’s not better explained   by another medical or mental disorder causes  clinically significant distress or impairment   it is important for clinicians mental health  clinicians to note that doctors will all often  
00:50:09
perform multiple exams to test the dysfunction  and look for what they call internal consistency   so one test for it shows that there is  a neurological problem but another test   of the same issue may show that there’s  not a neurological problem and the dsm  
00:50:32
goes through different examples of that that’s not  something we’re going to get into however again it   can feel very invalidating for the individual  that’s experiencing this neurological symptom subtypes need to be noted it’s  either with weakness or paralysis  
00:50:51
abnormal movement swallowing issues speech  issues and that it can even be mutism   seizures numbness or sensory loss sensory symptoms  or a mixed presentation it is acute if it lasts   less than six months and persistent if it lasts  more than six months and it’s important to specify  
00:51:13
with or without psychological stressors this one  is pretty straightforward it is often associated   with dissociative symptoms such as  depersonalization derealization and dissociative   amnesia however the prevalence is thought  to be less than one percent risk factors for
00:51:38
functional neurological symptom disorder  emotional dysregulation well we see emotional   dysregulation a lot in people with a history of  trauma therefore is it emotional dysregulation   or the trauma history a history of abuse  or neglect well there’s trauma right there  
00:51:59
or a presence of a neurological disease that  causes similar symptoms so they may have   for example epilepsy and they may also have  non-epileptic seizures instances resembling   functional neurological and dissociative symptoms  are common in certain culturally sanctioned  
00:52:18
rituals and would therefore not qualify for fnsd  speaking in tongues is one of those examples where   somebody’s speech gets becomes dysregulated a  lot of times they also may faint but that is   only within the context of the religious  ritual it is more common in women and  
00:52:41
people with functional neurological symptom  disorder have a higher rate of suicidality   than those with a recognized neurological disease  may be due to the perception of hopelessness and   helplessness if the doctors can’t seem to tell  you what’s wrong i don’t know just hypothesizing  
00:52:59
functional consequences according to the dsm are  simply physical disability however again and we   don’t have time to really go through it again in  this presentation but think about the physical   affective cognitive and relational impact that  having a functional neurological symptom disorder  
00:53:23
may have on people remember the fnsd does not have  an underlying neurological basis to it so how does   that impact how do people perceive that how does  that impact people’s perception of themselves   and psychological factors affecting medical  conditions a medical condition is present  
00:53:45
psychological factors or behaviors that  are well established as health risks   which adversely impact the medical condition  by causing exacerbation delayed recovery   treatment non-compliance or failure to  seek treatment so for example people with  
00:54:04
high levels of anxiety it may exacerbate their  asthma other times people may ignore a heart   attack because you know they’re they’re avoiding  the health system and that could cause them to die   if not go to the emergency room people who have  been diagnosed with diabetes may have a resistance  
00:54:28
to that diagnosis either anger about it or what  have you and they may engage in behaviors that are   contrary like eating a lot of sugar additionally  anxiety is and and high levels of stress are   associated with difficulty managing a1c levels  so there’s a lot of things that could go here  
00:54:49
it’s not better explained by another medical or  mental health disorder for example people who are   um qualify for alcohol use disorder may drink even  though they have hepatitis and that is actually   covered in the diagnostic criteria for addiction  continued engagement in behaviors that are
00:55:18
known to cause known to be exacer known to  exacerbate medical conditions prevalence   of is unknown the development of course is unclear  quote psychological factors affecting other   medical conditions must be differentiated  from culturally specific coping behaviors  
00:55:40
such as accessing faith spiritual or traditional  healers or other variations in illness management   that are acceptable within the cultural context  end quote so what they’re saying is if people   don’t choose to go through traditional western  medicine that doesn’t mean that they are having  
00:55:59
a psychological issue that’s complicating  their medical condition they are following a   culturally sanctioned treatment path differential  diagnosis factors that distinguish somatic symptom   and related disorders from medical conditions  alone include the ineffectiveness of medications  
00:56:18
a history of mental disorders thought that  was interesting unclear triggers or mitigators   so there’s no it’s difficult to identify what  causes um symptoms and or what makes them better   persistence over a period of several months  or more and excessive anxiety psychological  
00:56:38
factors affecting other medical conditions that  diagnosis it’s important to recognize that in this   disorder the psychological presentation  is not considered excessive necessarily   however it negatively impacts treatment or  worsens a presenting physical issue okay so
00:57:02
fictitious disorder or malingering we didn’t go  over but in in this one the individual presents   as sick with the intent to deceive they’re  faking it functional neurologic symptom disorder   what used to be called conversion disorder  we talked about in this one the presenting  
00:57:20
symptom is a loss of function not distress about  particular symptoms so there is no neurological   basis but they have a loss of function in illness  anxiety there are few or minimal somatic symptoms   and the anxiety is only about the illness  as opposed to other anxiety disorders  
00:57:45
in adjustment disorder a person’s anxiety is  clearly related to identified medical conditions   and does not cause clinically significant  impairment and lasts for less than six months panic disorder the physical symptoms or health  anxiety occur intermittently and surround the  
00:58:06
panic attack um and the episodic and neurological  symptoms are not the only symptoms during a   panic attack so you know you look through the  criteria for panic attacks you’ll see there’s   a host of symptoms um emotional cognitive and  physical that need to be present if the person has  
00:58:28
generalized anxiety generalized anxiety the worry  is about a variety of issues not just their health if the person has depression the focus  is on depressed mood and anhedonia not   the physical symptoms per se or if it  is focused on the physical symptoms  
00:58:50
this health and health health related stress  only occurs during a depressive episode   they did not specify anything about  um persistent depressive disorder   delusional disorder somatic type the intensity  of the conviction about the somatic symptoms  
00:59:12
is far greater than in people with somatic symptom  disorder so it’s just an intensity type diagnosis   however sometimes in delusional disorder  the delusions may be about something that is objectively not real like an organ is decaying  inside them body dysmorphic disorder the focus is  
00:59:40
of the distress is on a perceived flaw not getting  an illness but on a perceived flaw that they have   and it usually involves something  in the face or upper torso area   in ocd recurrent thoughts are more  intrusive and focused on preventing  
00:59:56
getting a disease in the future and  there’s a presence of compulsive behaviors   most of the time with somatic symptom  disorder there aren’t the compulsive behaviors   and the focus is on current symptoms  not preventing getting a disease  
01:00:13
in psychotic disorders the individual  is unable to acknowledge the possibility   that the feared disease may not be present or the  somatic delusions may be more desir more bizarre somatic symptom disorders are frequently  comorbid with mood disorders ptsd ocd  
01:00:35
sexual dysfunction in men  interestingly they were very specific   um our understanding of many physical disorders  is still evolving although known to exist since   1904 the american college of rheumatology didn’t  officially recognize fibromyalgia until 1990.  
01:00:53
likewise potts was first described in 1940  so i was wrong in my earlier guests it was   first described in 1940 yet even today many  doctors doubt the existence of the disorder   it is important for us as clinicians to recognize  the negative impact of psychological distress on  
01:01:13
medical disorders as well as the negative impact  of medical disorders on psychological health   we need to be very careful not to invalidate  patient perceptions of their distress   and instead help them identify strategies  to improve their quality of life
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Leaman Ralph

Really sugar is shaky because it originates from a straight stick see the play is Granny yes Grandma plus new style luv MaryJane so listen (Granny Apple last years blue ribbon production winner AKA) I, I, I ain't on the right side of my house Jane something or the other is in my room: finally after an extermination Grannie speaks once more "let my (old man) Pacman step on it". See it is home on the range so solo as it be truity speaks got a problem it is your own. But alter scenario: Z/n time; narcotics I got that candy s.p.ee..d360 Bar itch its' and Mickey Mouse for the Sultan 7 1 4er well a hem a hem, it went early in the morning like a smack chanting sugar structure 7 -one 1 +eleven and 4 do an ate 'er 8 eight 'er? Well that aint nice. NARCO says do you know them numbers change (response) Yes it is a FiX they are MF's Ope yeah Ope Douglas is it. Surrounded by Alkaloid is both Mary and Grandma in an never ending circle of membership. French mandates declare put up their dukes... ZEN Pepsi can talk half Chocolate and your ole man Pacman down in Cuba posing as the worlds one and only Coffee Wizard "back 1:1" tis Coffee time... ||