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Conversion disorder
Conversion Disorder is a condition where patients present with neurological symptoms such as numbness, paralysis, or fits, but where no neurological explanation can be found. It is thought that these problems arise in response to difficulties in the patient's life, and conversion is considered a psychiatric disorder in the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10)[1] and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th edition (DSM-IV).[2] Formerly known as 'hysteria', the disorder has arguably been known for millenia, though it came to greatest prominence at the end of the 19th century, when the neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot, and psychiatrists Pierre Janet and Sigmund Freud made it the focus of their study. The term 'conversion' has its origins in Freud's doctrine that emotional stress was repressed and 'converted' into physical symptoms.[3] Though previously thought to have vanished from the west in the 20th century, new research has suggested it is as common as ever.[4] The diagnosis can be controversial, however, as some patients do not feel that their problems are with their mental health.[citation needed] Additional recommended knowledge
DefinitionDSM-IV defines conversion disorder as follows:
The nature of the association between the psychological factors and the neurological symptoms remains unclear. Earlier versions of the DSM-IV employed psychodynamic concepts, but these have been incrementally removed from successive versions. The ICD-10 classifies conversion disorder as dissociative (conversion) disorder, which suggests the symptoms arise through the process of dissociation. HistoryIn the 19th century, physicians such as Silas Weir Mitchell in the US and Paul Briquet and Jean-Martin Charcot in France developed ideas about patients sharing unexplained neurological symptoms. Charcot specialised in treating patients who were suffering from a variety of unexplained physical symptoms including paralysis, contractures (muscles which contract and cannot be relaxed) and seizures. Some of these patients sporadically and compulsively adopted a bizarre posture (christened arc-de-cercle) in which they arched their body backwards until they were supported only by their head and their heels. The term "Conversion disorder" originated with Freud and the psychotherapy movement. He viewed these apparently neurological symptoms as a result of the conversion of intrapsychic distress in to physical symptoms. Much of Freud's work is now viewed with scepticism, and it has been suggested that patients Freud thought were hysterical may actually have suffered from organic illness, such as "Anna O."[5] Historically, conversion disorder was thought to manifest itself in many different ways. Conversion disorders were thought to be triggered by acute psychosocial stress that the individual could not process psychologically. This overwhelming distress was thought to cause the brain to unconsciously disable or impair a bodily function which would relieve or prevent the patient from experiencing this stressor again. This is in contrast to a more modern understanding that patients remain distressed by their symptoms in the long term[6]. PresentationConversion disorder can present with any motor or sensory symptom including
DiagnosisThe diagnosis of conversion disorder involves three elements - the exclusion of neurological disease, the exclusion of feigning, and the determination of a psychological mechanism. Each of these has difficulties. The Exclusion of Neurological DiseaseConversion disorder presents with symptoms that typically resemble a neurological disorder, such as stroke. The neurologist must carefully exclude neurological disease, through examination and appropriate investigations.[7] However, it is not uncommon for patients with neurological disease to also have conversion disorder[8][not in citation given], in which case the task becomes to determine how much of the patients problem is due to conversion.[dubious ] In excluding neurological disease, the neurologist has traditionally relied partly on the presence of positive signs of conversion disorder - certain aspects of the presentation that were thought to be rare in neurological disease, but common in conversion. The validity of many of these signs has been questioned, however, by a study showing that they also occurred in neurological disease.[9] One such symptom, for example, is La belle indifférence, described in DSM-IV as "a relative lack of concern about the nature or implications of the symptoms". In a later study no evidence was found that patients with 'functional' symptoms are any more likely to exhibit this than patients with a confirmed organic disease.[10] Another feature thought to be important was that symptoms would tend to be more severe on the non-dominant (usually left) side; there were a variety of theories such as the relative involvement of cerebral hemispheres in emotional processing, or more simply just that it was "easier" to live with a functional deficit on the non-dominant side. However, a literature review of 121 studies established that this was not true, with publication bias the most likely explanation for this commonly held view.[11] The process of exclusion is not perfect, so misdiagnoses will occur. However, in a highly influential[citation needed] study from the 1960s, Eliot Slater demonstrated that misdiagnoses had occurred in one third of his 112 patients with conversion disorder.[12] Later authors have argued that the paper was flawed, however[13] [14], and a meta-analysis has shown that misdiagnosis rates since that paper are around 4%, the same as for other neurological diseases[15]. The Exclusion of FeigningConversion disorder is unique in DSM-IV in requiring the exclusion of deliberate feigning in order to make the diagnosis. Unfortunately, this is no easier for conversion disorder than it is for other illness[citation needed], and is only very rarely established, by video surveillance, or by the patient's confession[citation needed]. A neuroimaging study suggested that feigning may be distinguished from conversion by the pattern of frontal lobe activation[16] however this has not been demonstrated outside of a research setting. True rates of feigning in medicine remain unknown, though neurological presentations of feigning may be among the more common[17] Establishing a Psychological MechanismThe psychological mechanism can be the most difficult aspect of the conversion diagnosis. DSM-IV requires that the clinician believe preceding stressors or conflicts to be associated with the development of the disorder, though how this might come about is still the subject of debate. The original Freudian model[18] suggested that the emotional charge of painful experiences would be consciously repressed as a way of managing the pain, but this emotional charge would be somehow 'converted' into the neurological symptoms. Freud later argued that the repressed experiences were of a sexual nature.[19] Janet, the other great theoretician of hysteria, argued that symptoms arose through the power of suggestion, acting on a personality vulnerable to dissociation.[20] In this hypothetical process, the subject's experience of their leg, for example, is split-off from the rest of their consciousness, resulting in paralysis or numbness in that leg. Later authors have attempted to combine elements of these models, however none of them has a firm empirical basis.[21] Some support for the Freudian model comes from findings of high rates of childhood sexual abuse in conversion patients[22] and from a recent neuroimaging study showing abnormal emotion processing of a traumatic event linked to motor processing of the affected limb, in a patient with conversion.[23] Support for the dissociation model comes from studies showing heightened suggestibility in conversion patients,[24] and in abnormalities in motor imagery.[25] EpidemiologyPrevalenceInformation on the prevalence of conversion disorder in the west is limited, in part due to the complexities of the diagnostic process. In neurological settings, rates of unexplained symptoms are very high, at between 30 and 60%,[26][27][28], which suggests conversion to be commoner than most neurological diseases. However, the diagnosis of conversion typically requires an additional psychiatric evaluation, yet few patients will see a psychiatrist[29] so an unknown fraction of those unexplained symptoms will be due to conversion. Large scale psychiatric registers in the US and Iceland, found rates of 22 and 11 per 100000 per year, respectively,[30] but it is unclear what proportion of unexplained symptoms these represent. CultureIt is often thought that rates are higher outside of the west, perhaps related to cultural and medical attitudes, though evidence for this is again limited.[31] A community survey of urban Turkey found a rate of 5.6%.[32] Many authors have found rates to be higher in rural and lower socio-economic groups.[33][34][35] Gender'Hysteria' was originally understood to be a condition exclusively affecting women, though it has increasingly been recognised in men. In recent, larger studies[36][37] females continue to predominate, with between 2 and 6 females for every male patient. AgeConversion disorder may present at any age but is rare in children younger than 10 years or in the elderly. Studies suggest a peak onset in the mid-to-late 30s [38][39][40]. TreatmentTreatment may include the following[41]:
There is little evidence-based treatment of conversion disorder.[42] Other treatments such as cognitive behavioral therapy, hypnosis, EMDR, and psychodynamic psychotherapy need further trials. References
General references
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Conversion_disorder". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |
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