Somatoform and Sleep Disorders

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Somatoform and Sleep Disorders. Chapter 9. Concepts of Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders. Somatoform disorders Physical symptoms in absence of physiological cause Associated with increased health care use May progress to chronic illness (sick role) behaviors Dissociative disorders - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Somatoform and Sleep Disorders

Chapter 9

Concepts of Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders

• Somatoform disorders– Physical symptoms in absence of physiological cause– Associated with increased health care use

• May progress to chronic illness (sick role) behaviors

• Dissociative disorders– Disturbances in integration of consciousness,

memory, identify, and perception– Dissociation is unconscious mechanism to protect

against overwhelming anxiety

characterized

• physical symptoms suggesting medical disease but withoutwithout a demonstrable organic

pathological condition or a known pathophysiological mechanism to account for them.

• Somatoform disorders are more common – In women than in men– In those who are poorly educated– In those who live in rural communities– In those who are poor

Somatoform Disorders: General Information

• Prevalence– Rate unknown; estimated that 38% of primary

care patients have symptoms with no medical basis

– 55% of all frequent users of medical care have psychiatric problems

• Comorbidity• Depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, substance

use, and personality disorders common

Somatization Disorder• Diagnosis requires certain number of symptoms

accompanied by functional impairment– Pain: head, chest, back, joints, pelvis– GI symptoms: dysphagia, nausea, bloating,

constipation– Cardiovascular symptoms: palpitations, shortness of

breath, dizziness

• Comorbidity– Anxiety and depression

Hypochondriasis

• Widespread phenomenon– 1 out of 20 patients seek medical care

• Misinterpreting physical sensations as evidence of serious illness– Negative physical findings does not affect

patient’s belief that they have serious illness

• Cormorbidity– Depression, substance abuse, personality

disorder

Pain Disorder

• Diagnosed when testing rules out organic cause for symptom of pain– Evidence of significant functional impairment

• Suicide becomes serious risk for patients with chronic pain

• Typical sites for pain: head, face, lower back, and pelvis

• Cormorbidity– Depression, substance abuse, personality disorder

Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD

• Patient has normal appearance or minor defect but is preoccupied with imagined defective body part

– Presence of significant impairment in function

• Typical characteristics

– Obsessive thinking and compulsive behavior

• Mirror checking and camouflaging

– Feelings of shame

– Withdrawal from others

• Cormorbidity

– Depression, OCD, social phobia

Conversion Disorder

• Symptoms that affect voluntary motor or sensory function suggesting a physical condition– Dysfunction not congruent with functioning of

the nervous system

• Patient attitude toward symptoms– Lack of concern (la belle indifférence) or

marked distress

• Common symptoms– Involuntary movements, seizures, paralysis,

abnormal gait, anesthesia, blindness, and deafness

• Cormorbidity– Depression, anxiety, other somatoform

disorders, personality disorders

Nursing Process: Assessment Guidelines

• Collect data about nature, location, onset, characteristics and duration of symptoms– Determine if symptoms under voluntary control

• Identify ability to meet basic needs• Identify any secondary gains (benefits of

sick role)• Identify ability to communicate emotional

needs (often lacking)• Determine medication/substance use

Nursing Process: Diagnosis and Outcomes Identification

• Common nursing diagnosis assigned– Ineffective coping

• Outcomes identification– Overall goal: patient will live as normal life as

possible

Nursing Process: Planning and Implementation

• Long-term treatment/interventions usually on outpatient basis

• Focus interventions on establishing relationship– Address ways to help patient get needs met

other than by somatization

• Collaborate with family

Nursing Communication Guidelines for Patient with Somatoform Disorder

• Take symptoms seriously

– After physical complaint investigated, avoid further reinforcement

• Spend time with patient other than when complaints occur

• Shift focus from somatic complaints to feelings

• Use matter-of-fact approach to patient resistance or anger

• Avoid fostering dependence

• Teach assertive communication

Treatment for Somatoform Disorders

• Case management– Useful to limit health care costs

• Psychotherapy– Cognitive and behavioral therapy– Group therapy helpful

• Medications– Antidepressants (SSRIs)– Short-term use of antianxiety medications

• Dependence risk

Nursing Process: Evaluation

• Important to establish measurable behavioral outcomes as part of planning process

• Common for goals to be partially met– Patients with somatoform disorder have strong

resistance to change

Sleep Disorders: Introduction

• About 75 percent of adult Americans suffer from a sleep problem.

• 69% of all children experience sleep problems• The prevalence of sleep disorders increases with

advancing age• Sleep disorders add an estimated $28 billion to the

national health care bill.• Common types of sleep disorders include insomnia,

hypersomnia, parasomnias, and circadian rhythm sleep disorders

Sleep Disorders: Assessment• Insomnia

– Difficulty falling or staying sleep

• Hypersomnia (somnolence) – Excessive sleepiness or seeking excessive amounts of

sleep

• Narcolepsy: Similar to hypersomnia– Characteristic manifestation: Sleep attacks; the person

cannot prevent falling asleep

• Parasomnias – Nightmares, sleep terrors, sleep walking

• Sleep terror disorder – Manifestations include abrupt arousal from

sleep with a piercing scream or cry

• Circadian rhythm sleep disorders– Shift-work type

– Jet-lag type– Delayed sleep phase type

Nursing Process

• Nursing Diagnosis

• Planning/Implementation

• Outcomes

• Evaluation

Predisposing Factors• Genetic or familial patterns are thought to play a contributing role in primary insomnia, primary hypersomnia, narcolepsy, sleep terror disorder, and

sleepwalking.

• Various medical conditions, as well as aging, have been implicated in the etiology of insomnia.

• Psychiatric or environmental conditions can contribute to insomnia or hypersomnia.

• Activities that interfere with the 24-hour circadian rhythm hormonal and neurotransmitter functioning within the body predispose people to sleep-wake schedule disturbances.

Treatment Modalities

• Somatoform disorders– Individual psychotherapy– Group psychotherapy– Behavior therapy– Psychopharmacology Sleep disorders– Relaxation therapy– Biofeedback– Pharmacotherapy

• Primary hypersomnia/narcolepsy– Pharmacotherapy– CNS stimulants such as amphetamines

• Parasomnias– Centers around measures to relieve obvious stress

within the family– Individual or family therapy– Interventions to prevent injury

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