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Practitioner > Friday's Progress Notes > Somatization and Somatoform Disorders

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Somatization and Somatoform Disorders

Friday's Progress Notes - July 14, 2000
Mental Health Information - Vol. 4 Issue 21
Published by athealth.com - http://www.athealth.com

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CONTENTS

1. Diagnosis and pathophysiology of somatization
2. Treatment of somatizing patients in primary care
3. Psychological adjustment of girls with chronic fatigue syndrome
4. Guidelines for psychiatric consultation in medical settings
5. Overview of somatoform disorders
6. Managing chronic pain
7. Fibromyalgia
8. Headache


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Dear Colleagues,

Although the number of primary care patients who present with unexplained somatic symptoms is significant, healthcare systems too often separate mental health from physical health. Today's newsletter focuses on issues related to somatization.

Please feel free to forward this information to professional colleagues, who can sign-up for a free subscription to Friday's Progress Notes at http://www.athealth.com/Practitioner/Newsletter/fpn_subscribe.html

Click here to review archived newsletters (1997 to the present).

Enjoy the summer weekend!
Jack

John L. Miller, MD

1. AMERICAN FAMILY PHYSICIAN
Somatizing Patients: Part I. Practical Diagnosis
Traditional medical training is focused on the identification and treatment of organic disorders and leaves most physicians ill prepared for recognizing and managing patients who somatize.
http://www.aafp.org/afp/20000215/1073.html

2. AMERICAN FAMILY PHYSICIAN
Somatizing Patients: Part II. Practical Management
In patients with somatoform disorders, emotional distress or difficult life situations are experienced as physical symptoms. This article reviews management strategies for treating somatizing patients.
http://www.aafp.org/afp/20000301/1423.html

3. PEDIATRICS
Psychological Adjustment of Adolescent Girls With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
In distinct domains of psychosocial adjustment, the adolescent girls with CFS showed strengths such as adequate self-esteem and scholastic and social abilities, and weaknesses such as low competence in adolescent-specific tasks and internalizing distress, which may partly be explained by syndrome-specific somatic complaints.
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

4. ACADEMY OF PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE
Practice Guidelines for Psychiatric Consultation in the General Medical Setting
Collaborative management integrating medical and behavioral healthcare services optimizes care and reduces costs. This practice guideline seeks to provide guidance to psychiatrists who regularly evaluate and manage patients with medical illnesses.
http://www.apm.org/prac-gui/psy39-s8.shtml

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5. MERCK MANUAL
Somatoform Disorders
The Merck Manual gives an overview of somatization disorder, conversion disorder, pain disorder, hypochondriasis, and body dysmorphic disorder.

6. FDA CONSUMER MAGAZINE
Managing Chronic Pain
WBy definition, acute pain after surgery or trauma comes on suddenly and lasts for a limited time, whereas chronic pain persists.

7. NIAMS
Fibromyalgia
Fibromyalgia syndrome is a common and chronic disorder characterized by widespread muscle pain, fatigue, and multiple tender points. The word fibromyalgia comes from the Latin term for fibrous tissue (fibro) and the Greek ones for muscle (myo) and pain (algia). Tender points are specific places on the body—on the neck, shoulders, back, hips, and upper and lower extremities—where people with fibromyalgia feel pain in response to slight pressure.
http://www.athealth.com/consumer/disorders/fibromyalgia.html.

8. NINDS
Headache
When a person has a headache, several areas of the head can hurt, including a network of nerves that extends over the scalp and certain nerves in the face, mouth, and throat.
http://www.athealth.com/consumer/disorders/headache.html.


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Copyright © 2000 - At Health, Inc. - All Rights Reserved.

This publication is registered in the Library of Congress, Washington DC - ISSN: 1520-3662

Page last modified on November 27, 2010



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