Huffman PowerPoint Slides - HomePage Server for UT Psychology
Download
Report
Transcript Huffman PowerPoint Slides - HomePage Server for UT Psychology
Chapter 7
Somatoform and Dissociative
Disorders
Ch 7
Historical Commonality
• Somatoform and dissociative disorders are very strongly
historically linked and may share common features.
• They used to be categorized under one general heading,
“hysterical neurosis” .
• The term “hysteria” (from the Greek “wandering uterus”)
referred to physical symtoms without organic basis
(somatoform disorder) or in dissociative experiences
(alterations in consciousness, memory, or identity).
• Kihlstrom’s theory (D&N, p. 189): Both disorders are
disruptions in the normal controlling functions of
consciousness.
Somatoform Disorders
• Psychological factors produce physical symptoms in
the Somatoform Disorders:
– Hypochondriasis is a preoccupation with having a disease
– Body dysmorphic disorder involves a preoccupation with
an imagined physical defect
– Conversion disorder involves a change in sensory/motor
function
– Somatization disorder involves recurrent, multiple somatic
complaints
– In pain disorder, chronic pain results in distress, in which
psychological factors play a maintaining role
Ch 7.1
Common Features
Lots of Physical Complaints
Appear to be Medical
Conditions
No Identifiable Medical Cause
Pathological Concern About
– Physical Appearance
– Functioning of Their Bodies
Clinical Description
Ancient Roots
Physical Complaints
No Known Medical Cause
Severe Anxiety / Fear About
Possibly Having a Serious
Disease
Reassurance Doesn’t Help
Clinical Description
Essential Problem is Anxiety
Preoccupied With Bodily
Symptoms
Misinterpretation of Symptoms
Strong Disease Conviction
Many Medical Visits and Tests
Why not Classify Such
Persons With an Illness
Phobia?
Facts and Statistics
1% to 14% Medical Patients
Equal Rates (Males vs. Females)
May Occur Any Time
Strong Disease Conviction
Many Medical Visits and Tests
Causes
Disorder of Cognition /
Perception
More Disease in Family
More Illness Concern in Family
More Attention for Sick Behavior
Psychological Treatment
Modify Illness Perceptions
Evoke Bodily Sensations
Provide “Appropriate”
Reassurance
More Research is Needed!
Clinical Description
Preoccupation With Appearance
– Imagined Defect
“Imagined” Ugliness
Mirrors (Fixation or Avoidance)
Ideas of Reference
Suicidal Ideation and
Tendencies
Common Locations of Defects
Hair
Nose
Skin
Eyes
Head / Face
Lips
Facts and Statistics
College Students
– 70% Report Some
Dissatisfaction
– 28% Meet Diagnostic Criteria
Many Consult Plastic Surgeons
Males = Females
Onset Late Adolescence
The
Plastic Surgery Solution?
Quite Popular but Expensive
Most are Disappointed With
Results
BEFORE
AFTER
Causes and Treatment
Little is Known
Co-Occurs With OCD
– Intrusive Thoughts and
Checking Compulsions About
Appearance
Exposure + Response Prevention
Conversion Disorder
• Conversion Disorder involves sensory or
motor symptoms
– Not related to known physiology of the body
• E.g. glove anesthesia
– Conversion symptoms appear suddenly
– Conversion symptoms are related to marked stress
– The person experiencing conversion disorder is not
distressed by sudden paralysis or blindness (“La Belle
Indifference”)
– Popularized by Freud
Ch 7.2
Facts and Statistics
Relatively Rare (< 1% prevalence)
Females > Males
Onset Around Adolescence
Somatization Disorder
• Somatization Disorder involves recurrent, multiple
somatic complaints with no known physical basis
• Diagnostic criteria include:
– Four pain symptoms in different locations
– Two gastrointestinal symptoms
– One sexual symptom other than pain
– One pseudo-neurological symptom (e.g. those
of conversion disorder)
• Lifetime prevalence is < 0.5%; females > males;
chronic condition
Ch 7.3
Causes
Family Link
Link to Antisocial Personality
– Weak Behavioral Inhibition
– Strong Behavioral Activation
– Short Term Gain (attention &
sympathy)
Clinical Description
Pain is Real
Pain May Have Organic Cause
Psychological Factors Maintain
Pain
Can be Debilitating
Etiology of Somatoform
Disorders
• Somatoform disorder reflects oversensitivity to
physical sensations
• Conversion disorder
– Psychoanalytic view focuses on unconscious
complexes and secondary gain
– Behavioral view focuses on similarity to malingering
– The incidence of conversion disorder has declined,
suggesting a role for social factors
Ch 7.4
Therapy for Conversion
Disorders
• Conversion disorder clients seek help from
physicians and resent referrals to
psychotherapists
– Psychoanalytic therapy is not effective for conversion
disorder
– The cognitive-behavioral approach involves pointing out
selective attention to physical sensations and
discouraging the client from seeking medical assistance
Ch 7.5
Dissociative Disorders
• Dissociative Disorders involve the inability to recall
important personal events or identity
– Depersonalization disorder involves an alteration of a
person’s self-experience
– Dissociative amnesia is the inability to recall important
personal information
– Dissociative fugue involves extensive memory loss
– Dissociative trance disorder involves a sudden change
in personality / “possession by spirits”
– Dissociative identity disorder (DID) involves the
presence of two different identities (alters)
Ch 7.6
Dissociative Phenomena
Depersonalization
– Altered Perception of Self
Derealization
– Altered Perception of World
Common Experience
Altered consciousness, memory
Some people have the experience
of driving a car and suddenly
realizing that they don’t remember
what happened during all or part of
the trip.
0%
100%
Some people find that sometimes
they are listening to someone talk
and they suddenly realize that they
did not hear part or all of what was
just said.
0%
100%
Some people find that they have no
memory for some important events in
their lives
(e.g. a wedding or graduation).
0%
100%
Some people have the experience
of finding themselves dressed in
clothes that they don’t remember
putting on.
0%
100%
Some people sometimes have the
experience of feeling that other people,
objects, and the world around them are
not real.
0%
100%
Normal
Dissociation
Amnesia
Partial
DID
Poly-Fragmented
DID
Fugue
Complex
DID
Etiology of Dissociative
Disorders
• Consciousness is normally a unified
experience,consisting of cognition, emotion
and motivation
– Stress may alter the fashion in which memories
are stored resulting in amnesia or fugue
– May result from
• Severe physical/sexual abuse
• Learned social role enactment
Ch 7.7
Depersonalization Disorder
Dissociative Amnesia
Dissociative Fugue
Dissociative Trance Disorder
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Clinical Description
Primary Features
– Depersonalization
– Derealization
Impairs Functioning
Causes Significant Distress
Runs a Chronic Course
Depersonalization Disorder
Dissociative Amnesia
Dissociative Fugue
Dissociative Trance Disorder
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Clinical Description
Several Patterns
Generalized
– Unable to Remember Anything
Localized or Selective
– Failure to Recall Specific Events
Depersonalization Disorder
Dissociative Amnesia
Dissociative Fugue
Dissociative Trance Disorder
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Clinical Description
Memory Loss
– Specific Incident
Go to Another Location
– Unaware “How They Arrived”
May Assume New Identity
Fugue Usually Ends Abruptly
Depersonalization Disorder
Dissociative Amnesia
Dissociative Fugue
Dissociative Trance Disorder
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Clinical Description
Differ Across Cultures
– Sudden Changes in Personality
– Possession by Spirits
Females > Males
Often Related to Trauma
Depersonalization Disorder
Dissociative Amnesia
Dissociative Fugue
Dissociative Trance Disorder
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Clinical Description
Formally
– Multiple Personality Disorder
May Adopt 100 Identities
– “Alters”
– The Nature of Alters
Person’s Identity is Dissociated
Central Features
Host Identity
– One Who Asks for Treatment
– Attempt to Hold Alters Together
A Switch
– Abrupt Change in Personalities
– Usually Instantaneous
Facts and Statistics
Average Number of Alters?
– 15
Females > Males (9:1)
Onset in Childhood
– Linked to Extreme Abuse
Runs a Chronic Course
Causes
Unspeakable Childhood Abuse
– 97% of Cases
– Escape Into Fantasy World
– Become Someone Else
– Do What It Takes to Survive
DID as a Means of Coping?
--Age 9 “developmental window”
Other Related Features
Suggestibility, Role Playing
Spanos et al. (1994) experiment,
Hypnotizability
Similar to Dissociation
?
Are these related to DID?
Abuse:
Controversial Issues
False vs. Real Memories
Do Therapists Plant Memories?
Can False Memories be Created?
– Elizabeth Loftus (D&N, p.178)
– (Williams, 1995; Elliott, 1997)
Consequences of the Debate?
Treatment:
Psychoanalysis Relevant
Dissociative Amnesia & Fugue
– Usually Improve on Their Own
– Stress Reduction and Coping
Dissociative Identity Disoder
Chronic, Treatment Process Difficult
– No Controlled Research
– Treatments are Similar to PTSD
Diagnostic Considerations in
Somatoform
and Dissociative Disorders
• Separating Real Problems from Faking
– The Problem of Malingering – Deliberately
faking symptoms
• Related Conditions – Factitious disorders
– Factitious disorder by proxy
• False Memories and Recovered Memory
Syndrome