| Literature DB >> 29364370 |
Daniel de Sousa Filho1, Elton Yoji Kanomata1, Ricardo Jonathan Feldman1, Alfredo Maluf Neto1.
Abstract
The Munchausen syndrome and Munchausen syndrome by proxy are factitious disorders characterized by fabrication or induction of signs or symptoms of a disease, as well as alteration of laboratory tests. People with this syndrome pretend that they are sick and tend to seek treatment, without secondary gains, at different care facilities. Both syndromes are well-recognized conditions described in the literature since 1951. They are frequently observed by health teams in clinics, hospital wards and emergency rooms. We performed a narrative, nonsystematic review of the literature, including case reports, case series, and review articles indexed in MEDLINE/PubMed from 1951 to 2015. Each study was reviewed by two psychiatry specialists, who selected, by consensus, the studies to be included in the review. Although Munchausen syndrome was first described more than 60 years ago, most of studies in the literature about it are case reports and literature reviews. Literature lacks more consistent studies about this syndrome epidemiology, therapeutic management and prognosis. Undoubtedly, these conditions generate high costs and unnecessary procedures in health care facilities, and their underdiagnose might be for lack of health professional's knowledge about them, and to the high incidence of countertransference to these patients and to others, who are exposed to high morbidity and mortality, is due to symptoms imposed on self or on others.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29364370 PMCID: PMC5875173 DOI: 10.1590/S1679-45082017MD3746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Einstein (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1679-4508
Diagnostic criteria for factitious disorder imposed on self
| A. The patient feigns psychological and physical signs and symptoms, or induction of lesion or disease; factitious disorder | |
| B. The individual presents him/herself to others as ill, impaired or injured | |
| C. Fraudulent behavior is evident even in the absence of obvious external rewards | |
| D. Individual's behavior is no longer well explained by a disorder, such as delirium or other psychotic condition | |
| Specify: | |
| Single episode | |
| Recurrent episodes (two or more events of feigning diseases and/or induction of injury) | |
Diagnostic criteria for factitious disorder imposed on other (previously named "factitious disorder by proxy”)*
| A. Psychological and physical signs and symptoms, or induction lesion or disease on other are feigned in association with identified fraud | |
| B. Individual presents the other (victim) as ill, impaired or injured | |
| C. Fraudulent behavior is evident even with absence of obvious external rewards. | |
| D. Individual's behavior is no longer well explained by a disorder, such as delirium or other psychotic condition | |
| Single episode | |
| Recurrent episodes (two or more events of feigning a disease and/or induction of an injury) | |
The agent, not the victim, receives the diagnosis.
Indications of factitious disorder with psychological conditions
| Worsening of symptoms after hospital discharge |
| Symptoms not consistent with those found in a syndrome |
| Consistent response to treatment |
| Reports about physical and emotional trauma, but no one can confirm them |
| Pseudologia fantastica (pathological liar) |
| Intense relationship with other patients and health care team |
| Symptoms similar to other patients that appear during hospitalization |
Most common factitious disorders in medical and surgical clinic
| Abdominal pain or recurrent pain in multiple sites(
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| Unexplainable metabolic and hydroelectrolytic disorders(
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| Hard-to-heal wounds and pathological bleeding in different sites(
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| Unexplained bleeding(
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| Repetitive urinary tract infections, hematuria and proteinuria(
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| Repetitive infections in different sites(
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| Genital injuries(
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| Convulsions(
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| Skin injuries and repetitive ocular conditions(
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| Subcutaneous emphysema(
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| No accidental poisoning in children, elderly patients or disabled persons(
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Warning signs of simulation
| Legal-medicine context of presentation (e.g., the individual is referred to general practitioner by a lawyer for exam, or he does it by himself/herself whereas legal processes and accusations are judged |
| Important difference between reported stress and incapability of the individual, findings and objective observations |
| Lack of cooperation during diagnostic evaluation and adherence to treatment regimen prescribed |
| Presence of antisocial personality disorder. |