1 / 38

Somatization Disorders in Children & Adolescents

Somatization Disorders in Children & Adolescents. Prepared by: Maa ’ n I. Mesmeh, M.D. Moderated by: Dr.Yousef K. Abu-Osba . Introduction:. Diagnosis & treatment of somatization disorders in children & adolescents constitute a challenge to the pediatricians: Missing something vs. false step.

mandell
Download Presentation

Somatization Disorders in Children & Adolescents

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Somatization Disorders in Children & Adolescents Prepared by: Maa’n I. Mesmeh, M.D. Moderated by: Dr.Yousef K. Abu-Osba.

  2. Introduction: Diagnosis & treatment of somatization disorders in children & adolescents constitute a challenge to the pediatricians: • Missing something vs. false step. • Frustration by never-ending recurrent complaints & annoyed by caring of not really sick patient. • Scanty researched field. • Psychiatrist seldom see these patients.

  3. Definition: • Somatization defined as the occurrence of one or more physical complaints for which appropriate medical evaluation reveals no explanatory physical pathology or pathophysioloic mechanism. • Somatization can coincide with a physical illness when complaints are in excess of what expected from the illness.

  4. Classification: • The diagnostic criteria for somatoform disorders were established for adults & are applied to children. • Currently, progress made a recent classification of child & adolescent mental diagnosis in primary care. • Factitious disorders not involved because signs & symptoms staged deliberately by the patient.

  5. Current classification of somatization disorders in children & adolescents: • Somatic complaint variation. • Somatic complaint problem. • Somatization disorder. • Somatoform disorder, undifferentiated. • Somatoform disorder, not otherwise specified. • Pain disorder. • Conversion disorder.

  6. Epidemiology: • The prevalence of somatic symptoms is high in the pediatric population. • Recurrent abdominal pain account for 5% of office visits. • Headaches affect 20 – 55% of all children. • Frequent headaches, chest pain, nausea & fatigue affect 10% of teenagers. • 11% girls & 4% boys. • Higher rates among lower socioeconomic groups.

  7. Pathogenesis: • Role of genetics: • Recent studies showed twins concordance. • Cluster in families with attention deficit disorder & alcoholism above what would be expected by chance.

  8. Pathogenesis: • Family factors: • Learned behavior when children’s somatic complaints are more acceptable in a household than is the expression of strong feelings. This reinforce the “psychosomatic pathway”. • If a family member has a chronic physical illness, there are more somatic symptoms among the children of this family. • Children often somatize with similar physical complaint of suffering family member.

  9. Pathogenesis: • The effect of family therapy. • Symptoms displayed by the child as a way of protecting the parents by distracting them from their own concerns. • Stress that implicated as triggering factor often bound to parental anxiety; the most common form of stress is the pressure on the child to perform. • Adolescents with sexual or physical abuse often present with somatic complaints.

  10. Clinical aspects: • Somatic complaints often result from a disease such as tonsillitis, gastroenteritis or urinary tract infection. • Similar complaints in the absence of physical disease must be approached as possible somatization. • Somatization diagnosis ranges from everyday aches to disabling “functional symptoms”. • Symptoms should be spontaneous & not explained by another mental illness such as depression or anxiety.

  11. Clinical aspects: • Somatic complaint variation: • This involves discomforts & complaints that do not interfere with everyday functioning. • Infancy: gastrointestinal distress. • Childhood: recurrent abdominal pain & headaches. • Adolescence: menstrual discomfort & other transient aches.

  12. Clinical aspects: • Somatic complaint problem: • This consist of one or more physical complaint that do cause sufficient distress & impairment (physical, social or school) to be considered a problem. • Infancy: GI symptoms that seriously interfere with feeding & sleep. • Childhood: symptoms that entails refusing to undertake expected activities.

  13. Clinical aspects: • Somatic complaint problem: • Adolescence: somatic complaints associated with more emotional distress, social withdrawal & academic difficulties. Sever complaints result in aggressive behavior & recurrent pain syndromes.

  14. Clinical aspects: • Somatization disorder: • Usually is an adult condition. • Undifferentiated somatoform disorder: • Multiple severe symptoms of at least 6 months’ duration which emerges during adolescence causing significant impairment. • Include pain syndromes, gastrointestinal or urogenital complaints, fatigue, loss of appetite & pseudoneurologic symptoms.

  15. Clinical aspects: • Somatoform disorder, not otherwise specified: • This involves conditions in which adolescents complaints do not meet the criteria for any specific somatoform disorder. • Unexplained physical complaints of fewer than 6 months’ duration. • Pseudocyesis.

  16. Clinical aspects: • Pain disorder: • Pain associated with psychological factors. • Pain associated with both psychological factors & general medical condition. • Pain associated with general medical condition. • Onset related to stress or avoidance. • Begins as mild pain syndrome. • Secondary gain.

  17. Clinical aspects: • Conversion disorder: • In this condition one or more symptoms affect a sensory or motor function suggesting a medical condition, yet the findings are not consistent with any known pathophysiologic explanation. • The symptoms appear to relieve conflict (primary gain) & they often increase attention for the patient (secondary gain). • Symptoms are self-limiting resolved in 3 months.

  18. Clinical aspects: • Conversion disorder: • May be associated with chronic sequelae. • Over time up to 1/3 of conversional patients develop a neurologic disorder. • Additional disorders: • Hypochondriasis. • Body dysmorphic disorder. These are seen primarily in young adulthood.

  19. Psychiatric disorders & somatic complaints: • 14 – 20% of American children have one or more moderate – severe psychiatric disorders. • Psychiatric disorders present initially with poor concentration, fatigue, weight loss, headaches, stomachaches & chest pain. • These must considered as primary or comorbid conditions.

  20. Evaluation: Diagnosis: • Ruling out the organic diseases. • Identify psychosocial dysfunction. • Alleviating stressors; bioosychosocial assessment by itself is therapeutic. Differential diagnosis: • Physical disease, psychological disease, factitious disorder & psychologically modified medical condition.

  21. Evaluation: • Considering psychosomatic etiology initially for unclear symptoms makes disclosure later on easier. • Findings that are suggestive of somatization: • Multiple somatic complaints. • Doctor shopping. • Family member with chronic & recurrent symptoms. • Dysfunction in school, peers & family areas.

  22. Evaluation: • “Red flag” that determine the extent of laboratory & radiographic evaluation is the detecting of findings suggest organic pathology (syncope on exercise, asymmetric pain, anemia & weight loss). • When findings suggest somatization the following laboratory investigations are sufficient: CBC, ESR or CRP, blood chemistry, stool for occult blood & urinalysis. • Extensive investigations reserved for “red flags”.

  23. Evaluation: • Preceding disclosure the pediatrician must convey a sense of specialness to the family & the patient. • Always in evaluating children with recurrent somatic complaints consider anxiety disorder, depression, attention – deficit/hyperactivity disorder, substance abuse & conduct disorder.

  24. Management/Disclosure: • Correct identification of these disorders may not be sufficient to provide help to the patient & his family. • Patients willing to listen to the pediatrician only of he first listens to them. • “You think it is all in my head, but I know I hurt & that there is something wrong”. • Psychosomatic is not craziness.

  25. Management/Disclosure: • Reminding the family of connection between emotion & bodily processes could be of help (fear: cold sweat, anger: stiffening muscles & clenching teeth & makes me vomit). • Some other principles of treatment: • Be direct & avoid deception. • Offer reassurance. • Positive & negative reinforcement.

  26. Management/Disclosure: • Some other principles of treatment: • Teach self – monitoring techniques. • Family & group therapy. • Communicate with the school. • Aggressively treat comorbid psychiatric disorder. • Psychiatrist consultation & psychopharmacologic intervention: prolonged impairment >3 months. • Monitor outcome.

  27. Management/Disclosure: • Some other principles of treatment: • Avoid unnecessary treatment which may reinforce the search for the “magic pill”. • Informing patients & family of the nature of the disease is ethical duty except in patients who have conversion disorder & can not benefit from the information.

  28. Prognosis: • Very good with appropriate intervention. • Untreated children will continue somatization as adults. • Undifferentiated somatoform is the most severe form, related closely to personality disorders, is of long duration & has persistent course continuing into adulthood.

  29. Quiz

  30. You are evaluating a 10 – year old girl for abdominal pain. She complains of generalized vague abdominal pain that has occurred almost daily for 6 weeks. There is no associated vomiting, diarrhea or weight loss. She has missed a total of 2 weeks of school because of her pain, but overall she is a good student. Findings on her physical examination are normal. Of the following , the most likely diagnosis is: • Conversion disorder. • Factitious disorder. • Somatic complaint problem. • Somatic complaint variation. • Undifferentiated somatoform disorder.

  31. You are evaluating a 10 – year old girl for abdominal pain. She complains of generalized vague abdominal pain that has occurred almost daily for 6 weeks. There is no associated vomiting, diarrhea or weight loss. She has missed a total of 2 weeks of school because of her pain, but overall she is a good student. Findings on her physical examination are normal. Of the following , the most likely diagnosis is: • Conversion disorder. • Factitious disorder. • Somatic complaint problem. • Somatic complaint variation. • Undifferentiated somatoform disorder.

  32. A 12 – year old girl comes to your office with the complaint of an inability to walk for 2 days. Her father carries her into the examination room. Except for refusal to walk, findings on the neurologic examination are completely normal. Further history reveals that she is a good student & that her parents are insistent that she makes all A’s in school so she can get a scholarship to college. When you ask the girl how she feels about her inability to walk, she appearsindifferent. Of the following, the most likely diagnosis is: • Conversion disorder. • Depression. • Factitious disorder. • Pain disorder. • Somatoform disorder, not otherwise specified.

  33. A 12 – year old girl comes to your office with the complaint of an inability to walk for 2 days. Her father carries her into the examination room. Except for refusal to walk, findings on the neurologic examination are completely normal. Further history reveals that she is a good student & that her parents are insistent that she makes all A’s in school so she can get a scholarship to college. When you ask the girl how she feels about her inability to walk, she appears indifferent. Of the following, the most likelydiagnosis is: • Conversion disorder. • Depression. • Factitious disorder. • Pain disorder. • Somatoform disorder, not otherwise specified.

  34. Which of the following statements about somatoform disorders in children is true ? • Adolescent who have somatization disorders feign pain for secondary gain. • An extensive laboratory evaluation is required before making the diagnosis. • It is rare for coexistent psychiatric disorders to be present. • Parents often complain of symptoms similar to the child’s complaint. • The rate of somatoform disorders is higher in boys than in girls.

  35. Which of the following statements about somatoform disorders in children is true ? • Adolescent who have somatization disorders feign pain for secondary gain. • An extensive laboratory evaluation is required before making the diagnosis. • It is rare for coexistent psychiatric disorders to be present. • Parents often complain of symptoms similar to the child’s complaint. • The rate of somatoform disorders is higher in boys than in girls.

  36. Which of the following statements regarding the evaluation of & treatment of somatoform disorders is true ? • Biofeedback & hypnosis are often effective treatments. • Medication rarely is indicated because it perpetuates the patient’s feelings that there is a true medical problem. • Screening for coexistent psychiatric disorders is recommended only if there is a family history of psychiatric illness. • Telling a family initially that the problem may be due to stress usually angers the family & jeopardizes the doctor – patient relationship. • The most effective method of treating the patient's complaint is to ignore it & explain that there is no medical explanation for the problem.

  37. Which of the following statements regarding the evaluation of & treatment of somatoform disorders is true ? • Biofeedback & hypnosis are often effective treatments. • Medication rarely is indicated because it perpetuates the patient’s feelings that there is a true medical problem. • Screening for coexistent psychiatric disorders is recommended only if there is a family history of psychiatric illness. • Telling a family initially that the problem may be due to stress usually angers the family & jeopardizes the doctor – patient relationship. • The most effective method of treating the patient's complaint is to ignore it & explain that there is no medical explanation for the problem.

  38. Thank You

More Related