Psychopathology of psychocutaneous disorders
Authors
Abstract:
Background: A high percentage of the patients referred to dermatologic clinics are either suffer from self inflicted disorders or from misinterpretation about their own health and organ integrity and or may suffer from different skin sensations including itching, pain, and burning; all of which may develop as a result of their underlying psychopathologies. Objective: Identification of underlying psychopathology of psychocutaneous disorders. Patients and Methods: 109 dermatologic patients who clinically diagnosed as psychocutaneous disorders referred to psychiatric clinic for identification of their mood, personality and thought disorders. The impression of psychocutaneous disorder was made according to clinical interview and physical examinations in dermatology office. A semi-structured interview based on DSM-IV criteria performed on all patients to evaluate their mood, personality and thought. They also filled the Beck’s and Tailor inventories for further evaluation of their possible depression and anxiety. Results: 107 out of 109 cases studied, suffered from mood disorders including anxiety, depression or a combination of them. Of the remaining two cases one suffered from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and the second one had no psychiatric disorder. 17 out of these 107 cases also suffered from personality disorder and 3 cases had delusional thoughts. Conclusion: All psychocutaneous patients may suffer from one or more psychiatric disorders which should be identified and approached properly.
similar resources
Psychocutaneous Disorders
Psychological problems are often manifest in the skin. In fact, it is estimated that between 20% and 30% of all skin disorders have some psychological component. Many patients who have psychocutaneous disorders—which are often direct evidence of or secondary to psychological abberations—drift from one physician to another, trying to find one savvy enough to cure their “skin condition.” Furtherm...
full textCommon psychocutaneous disorders in children
The prevalence of psychosomatic disorders among dermatological patients is high but frequently unreported because of difficulties in diagnosing and treating this patient group. Psychiatric and psychological factors may play different roles in the pathogenic mechanism of some skin diseases. The mainstay of diagnosis and treatment is the differentiation between skin disorders associated with psyc...
full textFamily patterns of psychopathology in psychiatric disorders.
OBJECTIVE Familial loading and crucial outcomes of family history of psychopathology in psychiatric disorders have long been recognized. There has been ample literature providing convincing evidence for the importance of family psychopathology in development of emotional disturbances in children as well as worse outcomes in the course of psychiatric disorders. More often, maternal psychopatholo...
full textThe psychopathology of posttraumatic embitterment disorders.
BACKGROUND The posttraumatic embitterment disorder (PTED) was introduced as a new subgroup of adjustment disorders. The trigger event in PTED is an exceptional, though normal negative life event that is experienced as a violation of basic beliefs and values. The predominant emotion in PTED is embitterment. This study presents first data on the psychopathological profile of PTED. METHOD 48 inp...
full textPsychocutaneous hypnoanalysis: detection and deactivation of emotional and mental root factors in psychosomatic skin disorders.
Many skin disorders have a significant psychosomatic component. Focused history-taking coupled with hypnoanalysis using ideomotor finger signals to detect positive responses to one or more of 7 common triggering or exacerbating factors permits systematic diagnosis of the presence or absence of a significant psychosomatic component. If no factor is positive, a psychosomatic component to the skin...
full textExplanation of Relationship between Cultures and Psychopathology with Emphasis on Sleep Disorders
One of the essential concepts that have been studied so far, but there is no clear paradigm about it, is the relationship between culture and psychopathology. The study of the relationship between these two concepts has produced contradictory results so far. In the About explanation of psychopathology explanation, attention is focused on the medical model, and it is now used more often, but new...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 5 issue 3
pages 2- 6
publication date 2002-04-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023