| Literature DB >> 23088583 |
Emily A Kendall1, Rashid Uz Zaman, Ruchira Tabassum Naved, Muhammad Waliur Rahman, Mohammad Abdul Kadir, Shaila Arman, Eduardo Azziz-Baumgartner, Emily S Gurley.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Frequent reporting of cases of hysterical conversion reaction (HCR) among hospitalized female medical patients in Bangladesh's public hospital system led us to explore the prevalence of "HCR" diagnoses within hospitals and the manner in which physicians identify, manage, and perceive patients whom they diagnose with HCR.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23088583 PMCID: PMC3534409 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6874-12-38
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Figure 1Age distributions of adult female medicine patients diagnosed with hysterical conversion reaction at two study hospitals.
Sequential assignment of hysterical conversion reaction (HCR) and alternate diagnoses during case patients’ hospitalizations
| HCR throughout hospitalization | 94 (55%) | 173 (62%) | 267 (60%) |
| HCR at admission, changed by discharge | 20 (12%) | 78 (28%) | 98 (22%) |
| HCR at discharge, not at admission | 56 (33%) | 22 (8%) | 78 (17%) |
| HCR as interim diagnosis only | 1 (1%) | 4 (2%) | 5 (1%) |
A sampling of diagnoses other than hysterical conversion reaction (HCR) assigned to HCR case patients
| Symptomatic/Syndromic, not otherwise specified | | Medical diagnosis or symptom: | |
| Respiratory distress or dyspnea | 15 | Pelvic inflammatory disease | 11 |
| Headache | 10 | Costochondritis | 6 |
| Convulsion | 9 | Urinary tract infection | 5 |
| Chest pain | 8 | Respiratory tract infection | 4 |
| Vomiting/diarrhea/abdominal pain | 7 | Peptic ulcer disease | 4 |
| Unconsciousness | 4 | Sinusitis | 3 |
| Fever | 3 | Enteric fever | 3 |
| Restlessness | 2 | Convulsion | 3 |
| Vertigo | 2 | Bronchial asthma | 2 |
| Respiratory distress or dyspnea | 15 | Migraine | 2 |
| Others including palpitation, swelling, weakness, bodyache | 1 each | Assorted others (e.g. paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, unstable angina, stroke, pleural effusion, combined deficiency anemia, chronic tonsillitis, electrolyte imbalance, dysmenorrhea, right ovarian cyst, acute calculus, post-menopausal osteoporosis, and fibroadenoma of the breast) | 1 each |
| Psychiatric: | |||
| Generalized anxiety disorder | 3 | ||
| Anxiety neurosis | 2 | ||
| Medical: | |||
| Asthma | 1 | ||
| Ischemic heart disease | 1 | ||
| | | Psychiatric | |
| | | Anxiety neurosis | 18 |
| | | Generalized anxiety disorder | 9 |
| | | Acute stress reaction | 4 |
| | | Panic attack/disorder | 3 |
| Schizophrenia | 1 | ||
*in some cases multiple non-HCR diagnoses were assigned to the same patient.
Characteristics of physicians interviewed about hysterical conversion reaction
| 1 | A | None | Intern | Female |
| 2 | A | Internal medicine | Registrar | Male |
| 3 | A | Internal medicine | Associate Professor | Male |
| 4 | A | Emergency medicine | Emergency medical officer | Male |
| 5 | A | Psychiatry | Professor | Male |
| 6 | B | Internal medicine | Assistant registrar | Male |
| 7 | B | Internal medicine | Indoor medical officer | Female |
| 8 | B | Internal medicine | Assistant professor | Male |
| 9 | B | Internal medicine | Associate professor | Male |
| 10 | B | Emergency medicine | Emergency medical officer | Male |
| 11 | B | Emergency medicine | Emergency medical officer | Male |
| 12 | B | Psychiatry | Professor | Male |
| 13 | B | Neurology | Professor | Male |