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Somatoform and Sleep Disorders

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Somatoform and Sleep Disorders Chapter 9 Concepts of Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders Somatoform disorders Physical symptoms in absence of physiological cause ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Somatoform and Sleep Disorders


1
Somatoform and Sleep Disorders
  • Chapter 9

2
Concepts of Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders
  • Somatoform disorders
  • Physical symptoms in absence of physiological
    cause
  • Associated with increased health care use
  • May progress to chronic illness (sick role)
    behaviors
  • Dissociative disorders
  • Disturbances in integration of consciousness,
    memory, identify, and perception
  • Dissociation is unconscious mechanism to protect
    against overwhelming anxiety

3
characterized
  • physical symptoms suggesting medical disease but
    without a demonstrable organic
  • pathological condition or a known
    pathophysiological mechanism to account for them.
  • Somatoform disorders are more common
  • In women than in men
  • In those who are poorly educated
  • In those who live in rural communities
  • In those who are poor

4
Somatoform Disorders General Information
  • Prevalence
  • Rate unknown estimated that 38 of primary care
    patients have symptoms with no medical basis
  • 55 of all frequent users of medical care have
    psychiatric problems
  • Comorbidity
  • Depressive disorders, anxiety disorders,
    substance use, and personality disorders common

5
Somatization Disorder
  • Diagnosis requires certain number of symptoms
    accompanied by functional impairment
  • Pain head, chest, back, joints, pelvis
  • GI symptoms dysphagia, nausea, bloating,
    constipation
  • Cardiovascular symptoms palpitations, shortness
    of breath, dizziness
  • Comorbidity
  • Anxiety and depression

6
Hypochondriasis
  • Widespread phenomenon
  • 1 out of 20 patients seek medical care
  • Misinterpreting physical sensations as evidence
    of serious illness
  • Negative physical findings does not affect
    patients belief that they have serious illness
  • Cormorbidity
  • Depression, substance abuse, personality disorder

7
Pain Disorder
  • Diagnosed when testing rules out organic cause
    for symptom of pain
  • Evidence of significant functional impairment
  • Suicide becomes serious risk for patients with
    chronic pain
  • Typical sites for pain head, face, lower back,
    and pelvis
  • Cormorbidity
  • Depression, substance abuse, personality disorder

8
Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD
  • Patient has normal appearance or minor defect but
    is preoccupied with imagined defective body part
  • Presence of significant impairment in function
  • Typical characteristics
  • Obsessive thinking and compulsive behavior
  • Mirror checking and camouflaging
  • Feelings of shame
  • Withdrawal from others
  • Cormorbidity
  • Depression, OCD, social phobia

9
Conversion Disorder
  • Symptoms that affect voluntary motor or sensory
    function suggesting a physical condition
  • Dysfunction not congruent with functioning of the
    nervous system
  • Patient attitude toward symptoms
  • Lack of concern (la belle indifférence) or marked
    distress

10
  • Common symptoms
  • Involuntary movements, seizures, paralysis,
    abnormal gait, anesthesia, blindness, and
    deafness
  • Cormorbidity
  • Depression, anxiety, other somatoform disorders,
    personality disorders

11
Nursing Process Assessment Guidelines
  • Collect data about nature, location, onset,
    characteristics and duration of symptoms
  • Determine if symptoms under voluntary control
  • Identify ability to meet basic needs
  • Identify any secondary gains (benefits of sick
    role)
  • Identify ability to communicate emotional needs
    (often lacking)
  • Determine medication/substance use

12
Nursing Process Diagnosis and Outcomes
Identification
  • Common nursing diagnosis assigned
  • Ineffective coping
  • Outcomes identification
  • Overall goal patient will live as normal life as
    possible

13
Nursing Process Planning and Implementation
  • Long-term treatment/interventions usually on
    outpatient basis
  • Focus interventions on establishing relationship
  • Address ways to help patient get needs met other
    than by somatization
  • Collaborate with family

14
Nursing Communication Guidelines for Patient with
Somatoform Disorder
  • Take symptoms seriously
  • After physical complaint investigated, avoid
    further reinforcement
  • Spend time with patient other than when
    complaints occur
  • Shift focus from somatic complaints to feelings

15
  • Use matter-of-fact approach to patient resistance
    or anger
  • Avoid fostering dependence
  • Teach assertive communication

16
Treatment for Somatoform Disorders
  • Case management
  • Useful to limit health care costs
  • Psychotherapy
  • Cognitive and behavioral therapy
  • Group therapy helpful
  • Medications
  • Antidepressants (SSRIs)
  • Short-term use of antianxiety medications
  • Dependence risk

17
Nursing Process Evaluation
  • Important to establish measurable behavioral
    outcomes as part of planning process
  • Common for goals to be partially met
  • Patients with somatoform disorder have strong
    resistance to change

18
Sleep Disorders Introduction
  • About 75 percent of adult Americans suffer from a
    sleep problem.
  • 69 of all children experience sleep problems
  • The prevalence of sleep disorders increases with
    advancing age
  • Sleep disorders add an estimated 28 billion to
    the national health care bill.
  • Common types of sleep disorders include insomnia,
    hypersomnia, parasomnias, and
    circadian rhythm
    sleep disorders

19
Sleep Disorders Assessment
  • Insomnia
  • Difficulty falling or staying sleep
  • Hypersomnia (somnolence)
  • Excessive sleepiness or seeking excessive amounts
    of sleep
  • Narcolepsy Similar to hypersomnia
  • Characteristic manifestation Sleep attacks the
    person cannot prevent falling asleep
  • Parasomnias
  • Nightmares, sleep terrors, sleep walking

20
  • Sleep terror disorder
  • Manifestations include abrupt arousal from
  • sleep with a piercing scream or cry
  • Circadian rhythm sleep disorders
  • Shift-work type
  • Jet-lag type
  • Delayed sleep phase type

21
Nursing Process
  • Nursing Diagnosis
  • Planning/Implementation
  • Outcomes
  • Evaluation

22
Predisposing Factors
  • Genetic or familial patterns are thought to play
    a
  • contributing role in primary insomnia, primary
  • hypersomnia, narcolepsy, sleep terror
    disorder, and sleepwalking.
  • Various medical conditions, as well as aging,
    have been implicated in the etiology of insomnia.
  • Psychiatric or environmental conditions can
    contribute to insomnia or hypersomnia.
  • Activities that interfere with the 24-hour
    circadian rhythm
  • hormonal and neurotransmitter functioning
    within the body
  • predispose people to sleep-wake schedule
    disturbances.

23
Treatment Modalities
  • Somatoform disorders
  • Individual psychotherapy
  • Group psychotherapy
  • Behavior therapy
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Sleep disorders
  • Relaxation therapy
  • Biofeedback
  • Pharmacotherapy

24
  • Primary hypersomnia/narcolepsy
  • Pharmacotherapy
  • CNS stimulants such as amphetamines
  • Parasomnias
  • Centers around measures to relieve obvious stress
    within the family
  • Individual or family therapy
  • Interventions to prevent injury
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