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Functional somatic disorders. Key diagnostic features.
Postgrad Med. 1986 Feb 01; 79(2):201-10.PM

Abstract

In diagnosis of functional somatic disorders, it is important to remember that the patient has no control over symptoms in somatization disorder, conversion disorder, psychogenic pain, and hypochondriasis. In addition, the environmental goals are recognizable only with careful history taking. Although voluntary symptom production is involved in both factitious disorder and malingering, environmental goals in the latter disorder are much more obvious. Depression can be an accompanying feature of all of these disorders; however, it is most closely linked with psychogenic pain. Atypical or masked depression should be included in differential diagnosis in elderly patients with somatic complaints. Referral to a consultation-liaison psychiatrist can help in evaluation and diagnosis of a somatic disorder. Joint consultation is the most effective way to plan treatment for this difficult group of patients.

Authors

No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Case Reports
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

3945596

Citation

Maue, F R.. "Functional Somatic Disorders. Key Diagnostic Features." Postgraduate Medicine, vol. 79, no. 2, 1986, pp. 201-10.
Maue FR. Functional somatic disorders. Key diagnostic features. Postgrad Med. 1986;79(2):201-10.
Maue, F. R. (1986). Functional somatic disorders. Key diagnostic features. Postgraduate Medicine, 79(2), 201-10.
Maue FR. Functional Somatic Disorders. Key Diagnostic Features. Postgrad Med. 1986 Feb 1;79(2):201-10. PubMed PMID: 3945596.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Functional somatic disorders. Key diagnostic features. A1 - Maue,F R, PY - 1986/2/1/pubmed PY - 1986/2/1/medline PY - 1986/2/1/entrez SP - 201 EP - 10 JF - Postgraduate medicine JO - Postgrad Med VL - 79 IS - 2 N2 - In diagnosis of functional somatic disorders, it is important to remember that the patient has no control over symptoms in somatization disorder, conversion disorder, psychogenic pain, and hypochondriasis. In addition, the environmental goals are recognizable only with careful history taking. Although voluntary symptom production is involved in both factitious disorder and malingering, environmental goals in the latter disorder are much more obvious. Depression can be an accompanying feature of all of these disorders; however, it is most closely linked with psychogenic pain. Atypical or masked depression should be included in differential diagnosis in elderly patients with somatic complaints. Referral to a consultation-liaison psychiatrist can help in evaluation and diagnosis of a somatic disorder. Joint consultation is the most effective way to plan treatment for this difficult group of patients. SN - 0032-5481 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/3945596/Functional_somatic_disorders__Key_diagnostic_features_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -