Literature DB >> 16575377

Idiopathic physical symptoms: a common manifestation of psychiatric disorders in primary care.

Javier I Escobar1, Alejandro Interian, Angelica Díaz-Martínez, Michael Gara.   

Abstract

Worldwide, patients with common mental disorders, such as depression and anxiety, have a tendency to present first to primary care exhibiting idiopathic physical symptoms. Typically, these symptoms consist of pain and other physical complaints that remain medically unexplained. While in the past, traditional psychopathology emphasized the relevance of somatic presentations for disorders, such as depression, in the last few decades, the "somatic component" has been neglected in the assessment and treatment of psychiatric patients. Medical specialties have come up with a variety of "fashionable" labels to characterize these patients and the new psychiatric nomenclatures, such as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, attempt to classify these patients into a separate "somatoform disorders" category. These efforts fall short, and revisionists are asking altogether for the elimination of "somatoform disorders" from future nomenclatures. This review emphasizes the importance of idiopathic physical symptoms to the clinical phenomenology of many psychiatric disorders, offers suggestions to the diagnostic conundrum, and provides some hints for the proper assessment and management of patients with these common syndromes.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16575377     DOI: 10.1017/s1092852900014371

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  CNS Spectr        ISSN: 1092-8529            Impact factor:   3.790


  5 in total

1.  Medically unexplainable somatic symptoms: a coat with many psychiatric colors.

Authors:  Randy A Sansone; Lori A Sansone
Journal:  Prim Care Companion J Clin Psychiatry       Date:  2010

2.  Development and Construct Validity of the Work Instability Scale for People With Common Mental Disorders in a Sample of Depressed and Anxious Workers: A Rasch Analysis.

Authors:  Louise Danielsson; Robin Fornazar; Kristina Holmgren; Åsa Lundgren Nilsson; Gunnel Hensing
Journal:  Rehabil Process Outcome       Date:  2020-07-14

3.  Racial and Ethnic Disparity in Major Depressive Disorder.

Authors:  Zhili Shao; William D Richie; Rahn Kennedy Bailey
Journal:  J Racial Ethn Health Disparities       Date:  2015-12-16

4.  Depression, Help-Seeking and Self-Recognition of Depression among Dominican, Ecuadorian and Colombian Immigrant Primary Care Patients in the Northeastern United States.

Authors:  Susan Caplan; Steven Buyske
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2015-08-27       Impact factor: 3.390

5.  Is duloxetine's effect on painful physical symptoms in depression an indirect result of improvement of depressive symptoms? Pooled analyses of three randomized controlled trials.

Authors:  Eiji Harada; Hirofumi Tokuoka; Shinji Fujikoshi; Jumpei Funai; Madelaine M Wohlreich; Michael H Ossipov; Nakao Iwata
Journal:  Pain       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 7.926

  5 in total

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