Conversion Disorder: A disorder in which a person's bodily symptoms affect their voluntary motor and sensory functions, but the symptoms are inconsistent with known medical diseases
Hard to distinguish from a genuine medical problem
Glove Anesthesia: Conversion symptom where numbness begins sharply at the wrist and extends evenly right to the fingertips
Those with conversion disorder do not consciously want or purposely produce their symptoms
Usually begins between late childhood and young adulthood
Often appears suddenly and at times of extreme stress
Somatic Symptom Disorder: A disorder in which people become excessively distressed, concerned, and anxious about bodily symptoms they’re experiencing, and their lives are disproportionately disrupted by the symptoms
The person’s concerns are disproportionate to the seriousness of the bodily problems
Somatization Pattern: The individual experiences a large and varied number of bodily symptoms
Predominant Pain Pattern: The person’s primarily bodily problem is the experience of pain
Psychophysiological Disorders: Disorders in which biological, psychological, and sociocultural factors interact to cause or worsen a physical illness
Also known as psychological factors affecting other medical conditions / psychophysiological
Ulcers: Lesions that form in the wall of the stomach or of the duodenum
Asthma: A disease marked by the narrowing of the trachea and bronchi, resulting in shortness of breath, wheezing, coughing, and a choking sensation
Insomnia: Difficulty falling asleep or maintaining sleep
Chronic Headaches: Frequent intense aches of the head or neck that aren’t caused by another physical disorder
High Blood Pressure
Coronary Heart Disease
What factors contribute to psychophysiological disorders?
Relaxation Training: A treatment procedure that teaches clients to relax at will so they can calm themselves in stressful situations
Widely used in the treatment of high blood pressure
Biofeedback: A technique in which a client is given info about physiological reactions as they occur and learns to control the reactions voluntarily
EMG: A device that provides feedback about the level of muscular tension in the body
Meditation: Technique of turning one’s concentration inward, achieving a slightly changed state of consciousness, and temporarily ignoring all stressors
Mantra: A particular sound that people utter when meditating to help them focus their attention
Used to help manage pain and treat all kinds of problems
Mindfulness Meditation: A person pays attention to the feelings, thoughts, and sensations that are flowing through their mind during meditation, but they do so with detachment and objectivity and without judgment
Hypnosis: People are guided by a hypnotist into a sleeplike, suggestible state during which they can be directed to act in unusual ways, feel unusual sensations, remember forgotten events, or forget remembered events
Self-hypnosis: Some people are able to induce their own hypnotic state with training
Used as an aid to psychotherapy and to help treat many physical conditions
Particularly helpful in the control of pain
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