Complex Case Study: Chronic Pain and Somatic Symptom Disorder

 
Clinical Cases with Somatic
Symptom and Related Disorders
 
Yasin Ibrahim, MD
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
Texas Tech University Health Sciences
Center
 
Case 1: chronic pain
 
Michelle Adams, a 51-year-old a hair dresser, with no prior
psych hx who was referred from her PMD for psych
evaluation. She has been suffering from severe back pain
resulted from a trauma 13 months ago.
She fell from the fire escape and fractured her pelvis,
coccyx, right elbow, and three ribs.
After the trauma, she was bedridden for 6 weeks and then
underwent several months of physical therapy. Daily
narcotic medication was only moderately helpful. She had
seen “a dozen” doctors in various specialties and tried
multiple treatments, including anesthetic injections and
bioelectric stimulation therapy, but her pain was
unrelenting.
 
 
Lately, she let the calls (from her friends) go to
voice mail most of the time because she just did
not feel up to socializing on account of the pain.
She had been unable to return to work since her
accident on account of the pain.
“These doctors keep telling me I’m good to go
back to work,” she said with visible anger, “but
they don’t know what I’m going through.”
In the last month, she had stopped bathing daily
and gotten slack about cleaning her apartment.
She reported sad mood, and felt hopeless.
 
 
What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses?
 
Major Depressive Disorder
Opioid use disorder
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Factitious Disorder
 
 
 
Diagnosis
SSD, with predominant pain, moderate to
severe,
MDD
 
 
Discussion
She has received care, rehabilitation, various
invasive outpatient procedures, and even
opioids yet her pain persists.
Distress (depression), excessive thoughts and
dysfunction escalates (not able to work, or
take care of herself)
Avoid confrontation over opioids and focus
more on treating depression
 
Diagnosis of SSD
 
One or more somatic symptoms that are
distressing or disruptive to daily life
Excessive thoughts, feelings, or behaviors related
to somatic symptoms or health concerns as
evidenced by one or more
1.Disproportionate and persistent thoughts about
the seriousness of symptoms
2.Persistently high level of anxiety about health or
symptoms
3.Excessive time and energy devoted to these
symptoms or health concerns
 
Differential Diagnosis of SSD
 
Features suggesting somatic symptom disorder over a
medical condition
  – Multiple organ systems involved
  – Early onset, chronic course, no physical signs –
Absence of lab   abnormalities
  – History of extensive tests
  – Presence of a psychiatric disorder
 
Additional mental disorders to rule out: Somatic delusion,
OCD, Anxiety, Depression, and Substance use disorders
 
Treatment of SSD
 
Care not cure
Long-term relationship with empathic primary
care physician
Physician training to provide psychosocial
interventions and avoid unnecessary medical care
that can lead to iatrogenic complications
Cognitive behavioral therapy
Antidepressants or anxiolytics to treat comorbid
depression and anxiety and, possibly to decrease
somatic preoccupatio
 
Case 2. Somatic Complaints
 
Norma Balaban, a 37-year-old married woman was referred
by her primary care physician for evaluation of depression
and multiple somatic symptoms.
Her problem list included
nocturnal leg spasms
sleep difficulties that led to head heaviness.
intermittent cold sensations in her extremities, face.
Pulsating sensations in her eyes after a poor night’s sleep.
difficulty urinating, menstrual irregularity
right gluteal pain
neck stiffness
 
 
Patient has been seen by a rheumatologist who
diagnosed her with mechanical back pain without
evidence of inflammatory arthritis.
A neurologist diagnosed her with atypical
migraine variant.
Tests performed (all were normal): two
electroencephalograms, an electromyogram,
three brain and three spinal magnetic resonance
images, two lumbar puncture studies, and serial
laboratory exams.
 
 
She spoke to the psychiatrist primarily about her
physical complaints.
She found it difficult to concentrate and complete her
work and was spending a lot of time on the Internet
researching her symptoms.
She acknowledged bouts of depressed mood over the
prior year with some anhedonia and occasional
thoughts of suicide.
She had started taking fluoxetine and gabapentin,
prescribed by her primary care physician, and
experienced partial improvement in her mood and
some of her pains.
 
 
What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses?
 
Major Depressive Disorder
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Factitious Disorder
Illness Anxiety Disorder
 
 
Diagnosis
SSD
Depressive disorder.
 
 
Discussion
Large number of seemingly unrelated physical
symptoms.
An inordinate amount of time and energy
devoted to thinking about and seeking care
for her somatic symptoms.
Some depressive symptoms including SI.
 
 
Case III: Chronic Lyme Disease
 
Oscar Capek, a 43-year-old man, was brought by his wife to
an emergency room (ER) for what he described as a relapse
of his chronic Lyme disease. he had been fatigued for a
month and bedridden for a week.
 
Saying he was too tired
and asked the ER team to call his psychiatrist (for two
decades)
The psychiatrist reported that he first saw Mr. Capek for
panic attacks which
 resolved quickly, but Mr. Capek
continued to see him for help coping with his chronic illness
(lyme disease).
Initially a graduate student pursuing a master’s degree in
accounting, Mr. Capek dropped out of school over worries
that the demands of his studies would exacerbate his
disease.
 
 
Capek usually felt physically and emotionally well. He
deemed that his occasional fatigue, anxiety, and
concentration difficulties were “controllable” and did not
require treatment.
He would often bring in articles on chronic Lyme disease
for discussion and was active in a local Lyme disease
support group.
Mr. Capek’s symptoms would occasionally worsen. This
occurred less than yearly, and these “exacerbations”
usually related to some obvious stress.
 
 
All testing for Lyme disease thus far had been
negative. When the internist explained this, Mr.
Capek became defensive and produced literature
on the inaccuracy of Lyme disease testing.
A standard laboratory screen was normal with
the exception of a slightly low hemoglobin value.
On hearing about the low hemoglobin, Mr. Capek
became alarmed, dismissed reassurances, and
insisted this be investigated further.
 
 
What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses?
 
Major Depressive Disorder
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Factitious Disorder
Illness Anxiety Disorder
 
 
Diagnosis
Illness anxiety disorder, care-seeking type
 
 
Discussion
Mr. Capek insists that he has a disabling disease
despite more plausible explanations. His
insistence is undeterred by negative testing and
contributes to chronic health anxieties and poor
functioning.
IAD fits him more because the symptoms are
mild. His behavior toward the likely insignificant
hemoglobin test demonstrates his
hypersensitivity toward any indication of
worsening health.
 
 
It is important, still, to rule out a 
yet-
undiscovered
 medical illness (fibromyalgia,
chronic fatigue syndrome)
Also rule out:
- Psychotic delusion: Rigid, implausible, other
psychotic symptoms.
- OCD: more related to contamination,
 
Illness Anxiety Disorder Diagnosis
 
Preoccupation with having a serious illness
Performance of excessive health-related
behaviors OR maladaptive avoidance (e.g.,
avoiding doctors or hospitals)
Somatic symptoms are not present or are mild
If a medical condition is present, concerns are
excessive
Causes distress or impairment
 
DD of Illness Anxiety Disordwer
 
• Somatic symptom disorder
• Panic disorder
• Generalized anxiety disorder
• Obsessive compulsive disorder
• Body dysmorphic disorder
• Delusional disorder, somatic type
 
Treatment of IAD
 
• Psychotherapy: CBT
Anxiety primarily relates to the meaning, significance,
cause, and consequences of non-pathological physical
signs or sensations
Cognitive restructuring and exposure to interoceptive
sensations
 
• Medications: serotonergic antidepressants
 
• Medical management
Maintain contact with caring physician
Minimize medical work-ups
 
Case 4. Seizures
 
Paulina Davis, a 32 y/o female with history of epilepsy
and no known psychiatric history, who was admitted
for seizure.
After failed trials of Lorazepam, the siezures responded
to fosphenytoin dose.
Labs showed normal levels of her antiepileptic and
negative urine toxicology.
(EEG) was ordered. Shortly after the study began, Ms.
Davis began convulsing; this prompted administration
of intravenous lorazepam. When the EEG was
reviewed, no epileptiform activity was identified.
 
 
She was placed on video-EEG (vEEG) monitoring
during which she had several episodes of
convulsive motor activity; none were associated
with epileptiform activity on the EEG.
Psychiatry was consulted and Ms. Davis denied
prior psychiatric evaluations
 or symptoms.
She only was concerned about the impact that
her seizures might have on her long-term health
 
 
When the findings of the vEEG study were
discussed with Ms. Davis, she quickly became
quite irritable, asking, “So, everyone thinks I’m
just making this up?”
Ms. Davis pulled her EEG leads from her scalp,
dressed herself, and left the hospital against
medical advice.
 
 
What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses?
 
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Factitious Disorder
Conversion Disorder
Illness Anxiety Disorder
 
 
Diagnosis
Conversion disorder (functional neurological
symptom disorder) with seizures, chronic
 
 
Discussion
She complains of altered sensory or motor function that
cannot be accounted for by a recognized medical or
condition.
be aware of the common co-occurring findings of
depression, chronic pain disorders, fatigue, and a history of
abuse.
Patients can have NES comorbid with epilepsy (in 10%)
Although patients may become angry upon learning of a
diagnosis of conversion disorder, the focus of discussion
should be on the good news: that they will not be exposed
to unnecessary medication or studies, and that
treatment—in the form of psychotherapy—is available.
 
 
Diagnosis
 
of Conversion Disorder
 
One or more symptoms of altered motor or
sensory function
Clinical findings of incompatibility between
symptoms and recognized neurological or
medical conditions
Causes distress or impairment, or warrants
medical evaluation
 
DD of Conversion Disorder
 
Multiple sclerosis: blindness resulting from
optic neuritis
Myasthenia gravis: muscle weakness
Periodic paralysis: muscle weakness
Myopathies: muscle weakness
Polymyositis: muscle weakness
Guillain-Barré syndrome: motor and sensory
Symptoms
Remember “Drop test”  and Hoover’s sign
 
Diagnostic Specifiers: Symptom Types
 
With weakness or paralysis
With abnormal movement: tremor, dystonia,
myoclonus, gait disturbance
With swallow symptoms
With speech symptoms: dysphonia, slurring
With attacks or seizures
With anesthesia or sensory loss
With special sensory symptom: visual, olfactory, or
hearing deficits
With mixed symptoms
 
Treatment of Conversion Disorder
 
Acute treatment
– Do not confront with psychological underpinnings
– Suggestion therapy: “you’ll notice yourself getting better; it
may take up to a few hours”
 
Ongoing treatment: CBT
Address stressors that overwhelmed patient
Cognitive restructuring, stress management, coping skill
training
Caution: do not miss medical diagnoses
Neurologic comorbidities are common
 
Case 5. Abdominal Pain
 
Psychiatrist was called to assess possible depression in
Rebecca Ehrlich, a 24-year-old woman who had been
hospitalized for severe abdominal pain that induced by her
underlying Crohn’s disease.
She has history of anxiety which was treated with
psychotherapy. She studied psychology and worked as
nurse assistant. She has an aunt with Crohn’s disease.
She stated the recurrent abdominal pain had wrecked her
social life and her job prospects. She had lost a job the year
before because of Crohn’s flares.
As a member of an online bowel disorders support group,
Ms. Ehrlich e-mailed other members on a daily basis.
 
 
The primary medical team was having difficulty obtaining collateral
information from previous physicians
 
whose name the patient
could only spell phonetically.
She could not explain why the team was unable to locate her
doctor and became irritated when the medical student pressed
more specifically to elicit further details about her prior care.
The mother was called and stated that she did not know the exact
names or phone numbers of her daughter’s medical providers.
She stated that Ehrlich had been hospitalized at least six times, in
contrast with the daughter’s report of two earlier hospitalizations.
Neither the gastrointestinal (GI) team nor the medical student was
able to locate Ms. Ehrlich’s primary gastroenterologist
 
 
She appeared calm and unworried about her upcoming procedures.
She looked sad at the beginning of the interview, but she appeared
more engaged and euthymic the more she talked.
Ms. Ehrlich’s endoscopy and colonoscopy results were normal. The
GI team told her that she could be discharged the next morning and
that she should have her internist call them. She readily agreed.
Ms. Ehrlich told the student that she was “feeling better already.”
She quickly removed her own intravenous line and started to get
dressed. The student went to get the primary GI team. When they
returned, the patient was gone.
The next day, one of the patient’s providers was called reported
that patient had a prior admission that was strikingly similar: after a
short hospitalization, she quickly fled from the hospital after a
normal colonoscopy.
 
 
What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses?
 
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Factitious Disorder
Conversion Disorder
Illness Anxiety Disorder
 
 
Diagnosis
Factitious disorder, recurrent
 
 
Discussion
she presents herself as ill by falsifying symptoms; there
are no obvious rewards to the hospitalization; and
there is not an obvious alternative diagnosis such as a
psychotic disorder.
Ehrlich’s inability to verify specific past providers.
 a recurrent pattern of dishonesty.
Having a family member with Crohn’s disease.
patients may have elements of multiple disorders. For
example, Ms. Ehrlich might have been subconsciously
motivated by taking on the sick role but might also
have enjoyed the ready access to intravenous opiates.
 
 
Patients with factitious disorder may claim
depression, for example, following the death
of a loved one who has not died. They may
add blood to a urine sample, ingest insulin or
warfarin, or claim to have had a seizure.
It is important to remember that patients with
factitious disorder 
are
 quite ill, but not in the
way they pretend.
 
Case 6 Breathlessness
 
Sophie Fredholm was a 26-year-old woman with cystic
fibrosis (CF) who was brought to the hospital with
symptoms of respiratory distress.
On day 4, psychiatry was consulted because The patient
was refusing to wear the bivalve positive air pressure
(BiPAP) device and was consistently found to be hypoxic
and hypercarbic.
The patient told the psychiatrist that she could not tolerate
the BiPAP device because it made her claustrophobic. She
did not feel that the BiPAP device was as necessary as the
doctors were saying.
She complained that the doctors and nurses were not
coming to see her frequently enough.
 
 
As a child, her mother, a school nurse, had administered
her treatments. When the patient became an adolescent,
she would frequently refuse the treatments and tell her
parents she wanted to be “out like a normal kid,”
She was continuously adjusting her oxygen face mask,
taking it off for a few minutes, and then stopping to say she
was too short of breath to continue talking. She repeatedly
glanced through the open door of her room, and wondered
aloud when her mother would be getting back from lunch
in the cafeteria.. She and her mother, she said, knew how
to manage her symptoms better than the doctors did.
Later that night, because of rising carbon dioxide levels,
Ms. Fredholm was intubated.
 
 
 
What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses?
 
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Factitious Disorder
Conversion Disorder
Psychological factors affecting other medical
conditions
 
 
Diagnosis
Psychological factors affecting other medical
conditions
 
 
Discussion
In refusing elements of her treatment (i.e., BiPAP), Ms. Fredholm
impedes optimal management and perhaps contributes to a
negative outcome (intubation).
Her behavior seems to be related to primary affect states (anxiety)
as well as emotionally laden beliefs (that others cannot know her
body’s needs as well as she and her mother do; that she has been
abandoned.
Many psychiatric conditions—ranging from the substance use
disorders to the psychotic, mood, and anxiety disorders—are
associated with behaviors that can worsen a comorbid medical
condition. In such cases, the other psychiatric condition should
generally be noted rather than PFAOMC.
 
Take Home Tips
 
For SSD, focus more on addressing the distress and
dysfunction rather than the detection of falsehood of
the medical symptoms.
For Conversion disorder look for incompatibility
between the symptom and recognized neurological or
medical conditions.
Patients can have both of medical illness and SSD at
the same time.
Don
t rush to an SSD diagnosis, because once the
patient’s symptoms are attributed to a psychiatric
diagnosis, the medical workup tends to cease.
 (
e.g
appendicitis)
 
 
 
 
Questions?
 
 
 
 
 
Thank You
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Michelle Adams, a 51-year-old hairdresser, presents with severe chronic back pain following a traumatic incident. Despite various treatments and medications, her pain persists, leading to distress and functional impairment. Her symptoms align with Somatic Symptom Disorder (SSD) with predominant pain, accompanied by Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). The case highlights the challenges in managing chronic pain conditions with underlying psychological factors.


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  1. Clinical Cases with Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders Yasin Ibrahim, MD Assistant Professor of Psychiatry Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

  2. Case 1: chronic pain Michelle Adams, a 51-year-old a hair dresser, with no prior psych hx who was referred from her PMD for psych evaluation. She has been suffering from severe back pain resulted from a trauma 13 months ago. She fell from the fire escape and fractured her pelvis, coccyx, right elbow, and three ribs. After the trauma, she was bedridden for 6 weeks and then underwent several months of physical therapy. Daily narcotic medication was only moderately helpful. She had seen a dozen doctors in various specialties and tried multiple treatments, including anesthetic injections and bioelectric stimulation therapy, but her pain was unrelenting.

  3. Lately, she let the calls (from her friends) go to voice mail most of the time because she just did not feel up to socializing on account of the pain. She had been unable to return to work since her accident on account of the pain. These doctors keep telling me I m good to go back to work, she said with visible anger, but they don t know what I m going through. In the last month, she had stopped bathing daily and gotten slack about cleaning her apartment. She reported sad mood, and felt hopeless.

  4. What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses? Major Depressive Disorder Opioid use disorder Somatic Symptom Disorder Factitious Disorder

  5. Diagnosis SSD, with predominant pain, moderate to severe, MDD

  6. Discussion She has received care, rehabilitation, various invasive outpatient procedures, and even opioids yet her pain persists. Distress (depression), excessive thoughts and dysfunction escalates (not able to work, or take care of herself) Avoid confrontation over opioids and focus more on treating depression

  7. Diagnosis of SSD One or more somatic symptoms that are distressing or disruptive to daily life Excessive thoughts, feelings, or behaviors related to somatic symptoms or health concerns as evidenced by one or more 1.Disproportionate and persistent thoughts about the seriousness of symptoms 2.Persistently high level of anxiety about health or symptoms 3.Excessive time and energy devoted to these symptoms or health concerns

  8. Differential Diagnosis of SSD Features suggesting somatic symptom disorder over a medical condition Multiple organ systems involved Early onset, chronic course, no physical signs Absence of lab abnormalities History of extensive tests Presence of a psychiatric disorder Additional mental disorders to rule out: Somatic delusion, OCD, Anxiety, Depression, and Substance use disorders

  9. Treatment of SSD Care not cure Long-term relationship with empathic primary care physician Physician training to provide psychosocial interventions and avoid unnecessary medical care that can lead to iatrogenic complications Cognitive behavioral therapy Antidepressants or anxiolytics to treat comorbid depression and anxiety and, possibly to decrease somatic preoccupatio

  10. Case 2. Somatic Complaints Norma Balaban, a 37-year-old married woman was referred by her primary care physician for evaluation of depression and multiple somatic symptoms. Her problem list included nocturnal leg spasms sleep difficulties that led to head heaviness. intermittent cold sensations in her extremities, face. Pulsating sensations in her eyes after a poor night s sleep. difficulty urinating, menstrual irregularity right gluteal pain neck stiffness

  11. Patient has been seen by a rheumatologist who diagnosed her with mechanical back pain without evidence of inflammatory arthritis. A neurologist diagnosed her with atypical migraine variant. Tests performed (all were normal): two electroencephalograms, an electromyogram, three brain and three spinal magnetic resonance images, two lumbar puncture studies, and serial laboratory exams.

  12. She spoke to the psychiatrist primarily about her physical complaints. She found it difficult to concentrate and complete her work and was spending a lot of time on the Internet researching her symptoms. She acknowledged bouts of depressed mood over the prior year with some anhedonia and occasional thoughts of suicide. She had started taking fluoxetine and gabapentin, prescribed by her primary care physician, and experienced partial improvement in her mood and some of her pains.

  13. What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses? Major Depressive Disorder Somatic Symptom Disorder Factitious Disorder Illness Anxiety Disorder

  14. Diagnosis SSD Depressive disorder.

  15. Discussion Large number of seemingly unrelated physical symptoms. An inordinate amount of time and energy devoted to thinking about and seeking care for her somatic symptoms. Some depressive symptoms including SI.

  16. Case III: Chronic Lyme Disease Oscar Capek, a 43-year-old man, was brought by his wife to an emergency room (ER) for what he described as a relapse of his chronic Lyme disease. he had been fatigued for a month and bedridden for a week. Saying he was too tired and asked the ER team to call his psychiatrist (for two decades) The psychiatrist reported that he first saw Mr. Capek for panic attacks which resolved quickly, but Mr. Capek continued to see him for help coping with his chronic illness (lyme disease). Initially a graduate student pursuing a master s degree in accounting, Mr. Capek dropped out of school over worries that the demands of his studies would exacerbate his disease.

  17. Capek usually felt physically and emotionally well. He deemed that his occasional fatigue, anxiety, and concentration difficulties were controllable and did not require treatment. He would often bring in articles on chronic Lyme disease for discussion and was active in a local Lyme disease support group. Mr. Capek s symptoms would occasionally worsen. This occurred less than yearly, and these exacerbations usually related to some obvious stress.

  18. All testing for Lyme disease thus far had been negative. When the internist explained this, Mr. Capek became defensive and produced literature on the inaccuracy of Lyme disease testing. A standard laboratory screen was normal with the exception of a slightly low hemoglobin value. On hearing about the low hemoglobin, Mr. Capek became alarmed, dismissed reassurances, and insisted this be investigated further.

  19. What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses? Major Depressive Disorder Somatic Symptom Disorder Factitious Disorder Illness Anxiety Disorder

  20. Diagnosis Illness anxiety disorder, care-seeking type

  21. Discussion Mr. Capek insists that he has a disabling disease despite more plausible explanations. His insistence is undeterred by negative testing and contributes to chronic health anxieties and poor functioning. IAD fits him more because the symptoms are mild. His behavior toward the likely insignificant hemoglobin test demonstrates his hypersensitivity toward any indication of worsening health.

  22. It is important, still, to rule out a yet- undiscovered medical illness (fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome) Also rule out: - Psychotic delusion: Rigid, implausible, other psychotic symptoms. - OCD: more related to contamination,

  23. Illness Anxiety Disorder Diagnosis Preoccupation with having a serious illness Performance of excessive health-related behaviors OR maladaptive avoidance (e.g., avoiding doctors or hospitals) Somatic symptoms are not present or are mild If a medical condition is present, concerns are excessive Causes distress or impairment

  24. DD of Illness Anxiety Disordwer Somatic symptom disorder Panic disorder Generalized anxiety disorder Obsessive compulsive disorder Body dysmorphic disorder Delusional disorder, somatic type

  25. Treatment of IAD Psychotherapy: CBT Anxiety primarily relates to the meaning, significance, cause, and consequences of non-pathological physical signs or sensations Cognitive restructuring and exposure to interoceptive sensations Medications: serotonergic antidepressants Medical management Maintain contact with caring physician Minimize medical work-ups

  26. Case 4. Seizures Paulina Davis, a 32 y/o female with history of epilepsy and no known psychiatric history, who was admitted for seizure. After failed trials of Lorazepam, the siezures responded to fosphenytoin dose. Labs showed normal levels of her antiepileptic and negative urine toxicology. (EEG) was ordered. Shortly after the study began, Ms. Davis began convulsing; this prompted administration of intravenous lorazepam. When the EEG was reviewed, no epileptiform activity was identified.

  27. She was placed on video-EEG (vEEG) monitoring during which she had several episodes of convulsive motor activity; none were associated with epileptiform activity on the EEG. Psychiatry was consulted and Ms. Davis denied prior psychiatric evaluations or symptoms. She only was concerned about the impact that her seizures might have on her long-term health

  28. When the findings of the vEEG study were discussed with Ms. Davis, she quickly became quite irritable, asking, So, everyone thinks I m just making this up? Ms. Davis pulled her EEG leads from her scalp, dressed herself, and left the hospital against medical advice.

  29. What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses? Somatic Symptom Disorder Factitious Disorder Conversion Disorder Illness Anxiety Disorder

  30. Diagnosis Conversion disorder (functional neurological symptom disorder) with seizures, chronic

  31. Discussion She complains of altered sensory or motor function that cannot be accounted for by a recognized medical or condition. be aware of the common co-occurring findings of depression, chronic pain disorders, fatigue, and a history of abuse. Patients can have NES comorbid with epilepsy (in 10%) Although patients may become angry upon learning of a diagnosis of conversion disorder, the focus of discussion should be on the good news: that they will not be exposed to unnecessary medication or studies, and that treatment in the form of psychotherapy is available.

  32. Diagnosis of Conversion Disorder One or more symptoms of altered motor or sensory function Clinical findings of incompatibility between symptoms and recognized neurological or medical conditions Causes distress or impairment, or warrants medical evaluation

  33. DD of Conversion Disorder Multiple sclerosis: blindness resulting from optic neuritis Myasthenia gravis: muscle weakness Periodic paralysis: muscle weakness Myopathies: muscle weakness Polymyositis: muscle weakness Guillain-Barre syndrome: motor and sensory Symptoms Remember Drop test and Hoover s sign

  34. Diagnostic Specifiers: Symptom Types With weakness or paralysis With abnormal movement: tremor, dystonia, myoclonus, gait disturbance With swallow symptoms With speech symptoms: dysphonia, slurring With attacks or seizures With anesthesia or sensory loss With special sensory symptom: visual, olfactory, or hearing deficits With mixed symptoms

  35. Treatment of Conversion Disorder Acute treatment Do not confront with psychological underpinnings Suggestion therapy: you ll notice yourself getting better; it may take up to a few hours Ongoing treatment: CBT Address stressors that overwhelmed patient Cognitive restructuring, stress management, coping skill training Caution: do not miss medical diagnoses Neurologic comorbidities are common

  36. Case 5. Abdominal Pain Psychiatrist was called to assess possible depression in Rebecca Ehrlich, a 24-year-old woman who had been hospitalized for severe abdominal pain that induced by her underlying Crohn s disease. She has history of anxiety which was treated with psychotherapy. She studied psychology and worked as nurse assistant. She has an aunt with Crohn s disease. She stated the recurrent abdominal pain had wrecked her social life and her job prospects. She had lost a job the year before because of Crohn s flares. As a member of an online bowel disorders support group, Ms. Ehrlich e-mailed other members on a daily basis.

  37. The primary medical team was having difficulty obtaining collateral information from previous physicians whose name the patient could only spell phonetically. She could not explain why the team was unable to locate her doctor and became irritated when the medical student pressed more specifically to elicit further details about her prior care. The mother was called and stated that she did not know the exact names or phone numbers of her daughter s medical providers. She stated that Ehrlich had been hospitalized at least six times, in contrast with the daughter s report of two earlier hospitalizations. Neither the gastrointestinal (GI) team nor the medical student was able to locate Ms. Ehrlich s primary gastroenterologist

  38. She appeared calm and unworried about her upcoming procedures. She looked sad at the beginning of the interview, but she appeared more engaged and euthymic the more she talked. Ms. Ehrlich s endoscopy and colonoscopy results were normal. The GI team told her that she could be discharged the next morning and that she should have her internist call them. She readily agreed. Ms. Ehrlich told the student that she was feeling better already. She quickly removed her own intravenous line and started to get dressed. The student went to get the primary GI team. When they returned, the patient was gone. The next day, one of the patient s providers was called reported that patient had a prior admission that was strikingly similar: after a short hospitalization, she quickly fled from the hospital after a normal colonoscopy.

  39. What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses? Somatic Symptom Disorder Factitious Disorder Conversion Disorder Illness Anxiety Disorder

  40. Diagnosis Factitious disorder, recurrent

  41. Discussion she presents herself as ill by falsifying symptoms; there are no obvious rewards to the hospitalization; and there is not an obvious alternative diagnosis such as a psychotic disorder. Ehrlich s inability to verify specific past providers. a recurrent pattern of dishonesty. Having a family member with Crohn s disease. patients may have elements of multiple disorders. For example, Ms. Ehrlich might have been subconsciously motivated by taking on the sick role but might also have enjoyed the ready access to intravenous opiates.

  42. Patients with factitious disorder may claim depression, for example, following the death of a loved one who has not died. They may add blood to a urine sample, ingest insulin or warfarin, or claim to have had a seizure. It is important to remember that patients with factitious disorder are quite ill, but not in the way they pretend.

  43. Case 6 Breathlessness Sophie Fredholm was a 26-year-old woman with cystic fibrosis (CF) who was brought to the hospital with symptoms of respiratory distress. On day 4, psychiatry was consulted because The patient was refusing to wear the bivalve positive air pressure (BiPAP) device and was consistently found to be hypoxic and hypercarbic. The patient told the psychiatrist that she could not tolerate the BiPAP device because it made her claustrophobic. She did not feel that the BiPAP device was as necessary as the doctors were saying. She complained that the doctors and nurses were not coming to see her frequently enough.

  44. As a child, her mother, a school nurse, had administered her treatments. When the patient became an adolescent, she would frequently refuse the treatments and tell her parents she wanted to be out like a normal kid, She was continuously adjusting her oxygen face mask, taking it off for a few minutes, and then stopping to say she was too short of breath to continue talking. She repeatedly glanced through the open door of her room, and wondered aloud when her mother would be getting back from lunch in the cafeteria.. She and her mother, she said, knew how to manage her symptoms better than the doctors did. Later that night, because of rising carbon dioxide levels, Ms. Fredholm was intubated.

  45. What is the most likely diagnosis/diagnoses? Somatic Symptom Disorder Factitious Disorder Conversion Disorder Psychological factors affecting other medical conditions

  46. Diagnosis Psychological factors affecting other medical conditions

  47. Discussion In refusing elements of her treatment (i.e., BiPAP), Ms. Fredholm impedes optimal management and perhaps contributes to a negative outcome (intubation). Her behavior seems to be related to primary affect states (anxiety) as well as emotionally laden beliefs (that others cannot know her body s needs as well as she and her mother do; that she has been abandoned. Many psychiatric conditions ranging from the substance use disorders to the psychotic, mood, and anxiety disorders are associated with behaviors that can worsen a comorbid medical condition. In such cases, the other psychiatric condition should generally be noted rather than PFAOMC.

  48. Take Home Tips For SSD, focus more on addressing the distress and dysfunction rather than the detection of falsehood of the medical symptoms. For Conversion disorder look for incompatibility between the symptom and recognized neurological or medical conditions. Patients can have both of medical illness and SSD at the same time. Don t rush to an SSD diagnosis, because once the patient s symptoms are attributed to a psychiatric diagnosis, the medical workup tends to cease. (e.g appendicitis)

  49. Questions?

  50. Thank You

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