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hypochondriasis
hy·po·chon·dri·a·sis H0364900 (hī′pə-kən-drī′ə-sĭs)n. pl. hy·po·chon·dri·a·ses (-sēz′) See hypochondria. [hypochondr(ia) + -iasis.]hypochondriacism, hypochondriasis1. Psychiatry. an abnormal state characterized by emotional depression and imagined ill health, often accompanied by symptoms untraceable to any organic disease. 2. excessive concern and conversation about one’s health. Also called hypochondria, nosomania. — hypochondriac, n. — hypochondriacal, adj.See also: HealthThesaurusNoun | 1. | hypochondriasis - chronic and abnormal anxiety about imaginary symptoms and ailmentshypochondriaanxiety, anxiousness - (psychiatry) a relatively permanent state of worry and nervousness occurring in a variety of mental disorders, usually accompanied by compulsive behavior or attacks of panic | TranslationsHypochondriasis
hypochondriasis[‚hī·pə·kən′drī·ə·səs] (psychology) A chronic condition in which the patient is morbidly concerned with his own health and believes himself suffering from grave bodily diseases. Also known as hypochondria. Hypochondriasis a morbid condition characterized by excessive preoccupation with one’s own health and by groundless fear for it and for life itself. Fixated preoccupation with one’s own physical sensations, anxiety about one’s health, and searching out and exposing symptoms of physical disorders are observed in neuroses and psychoses of various origins. In psychoses, distinctive, odd, and hallucinatory sensations, most often in the internal organs, are combined with delusions of putrefaction, active delirium, and obsessive delusions. The patients’ complaints are fantastic (“this or that organ has rotted or melted,” “my insides are inhabited by some kind of little animals”) and depressive and do not correspond to the results of objective (clinical and laboratory) investigation. The mechanism of development of hypochondriasis is not sufficiently clear. According to the teaching of I. P. Pavlov on higher nervous activity, hypochondriasis may be regarded as the result of the inertness of the basic nerve processes in the cerebral cortex at the level of the analyzers of the internal environment. According to the conception of the Soviet psychiatrist V. A. Giliarov-skii, signals from the internal environment of the body in the mentally ill patient, which in a healthy person do not “break through” the higher subcortical centers, reach the cerebral cortex and are transformed into hallucinations and hypochondriacal delirium. Treatment consists in elimination of the basic disease (neurosis or psychosis). B. I. FRANKSHTEIN hypochondriasis
Hypochondriasis DefinitionHypochondriasis is a mental disorder characterized by excessive fear of or preoccupation with a serious illness, despite medical testing and reassurance to the contrary. It was formerly called hypochondriacal neurosis.DescriptionAlthough hypochondriasis is often considered a disorder that primarily affects adults, it is now increasingly recognized in children and adolescents. In addition, hypochondriasis may develop in elderly people without previous histories of health-related fears. The disorder accounts for about 5% of psychiatric patients and is equally common in men and women.Causes and symptomsThe causes of hypochondriasis are not precisely known. Children may have physical symptoms that resemble or mimic those of other family members. In adults, hypochondriasis may sometimes reflect a self-centered character structure or a wish to be taken care of by others; it may also have been copied from a parent's behavior. In elderly people, hypochondriasis may be associated with depression or grief. It may also involve biologically based hypersensitivity to internal stimuli.Most hypochondriacs are worried about being physically sick, although some express fear of insanity. The symptoms reported can range from general descriptions of a specific illness to unusual complaints. In many instances the symptoms reflect intensified awareness of ordinary body functions, such as heartbeat, breathing, or stomach noises. It is important to understand that a hypochondriac's symptoms are not "in the head" in the sense of being delusional. The symptoms are real, but the patient misinterprets bodily functions and attributes them to a serious or even lethal cause.DiagnosisThe diagnosis is often complicated by the patient's detailed understanding of symptoms and medical terminology from previous contacts with doctors. If a new doctor suspects hypochondriasis, he or she will usually order a complete medical workup in order to rule out physical disease.Psychological evaluation is also necessary to rule out other disorders that involve feelings of anxiety or complaints of physical illness. These disorders include depression, panic disorder, and schizophrenia with somatic (physical) delusions. The following features are characteristic of hypochondriasis:- The patient is not psychotic (out of touch with reality or hallucinating).
- The patient gets upset or blames the doctor when told there is "nothing wrong," or that there is a psychological basis for the problem.
- There is a correlation between episodes of hypochondriacal behavior and stressful periods in the patient's life.
- The behavior has lasted at least six months.
Evaluation of children and adolescents with hypochondriasis should include the possibility of abuse by family members.TreatmentThe goal of therapy is to help the patient (and family) live with the symptoms and to modify thinking and behavior that reinforces hypochondriacal symptoms. This treatment orientation is called supportive, as distinct from insight-oriented, because hypochondriacs usually resist psychological interpretations of their symptoms. Supportive treatment may include medications to relieve anxiety. Some clinicians look carefully for "masked" depression and treat with antidepressants.Follow-up care includes regular physical check-ups, because about 30% of patients with hypochondriasis will eventually develop a serious physical illness. The physician also tries to prevent unnecessary medical testing and "doctor shopping" on the patient's part.PrognosisFrom 33-50% of patients with hypochondriasis can expect significant improvement from the current methods of treatment.ResourcesBooksEisendrath, Stuart J. "Psychiatric Disorders." In Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment, 1998, edited by Stephen McPhee, et al., 37th ed. Stamford: Appleton & Lange, 1997.Key termsSomatoform disorder — A category of psychiatric disorder characterized by conversion of emotional distress into physical symptoms or by symptoms of physical illness that have no discernible organic cause. Hypochondriasis is classified as a somatoform disorder.Supportive therapy — Any form of treatment intended to relieve symptoms or help the patient live with them rather than attempt changes in character structure.hypochondriasis [hi″po-kon-dri´ah-sis] a somatoform disorder marked by a preoccupation with one's health bodily functions and by exaggeration of normal sensations (such as heart beats, sweating, peristaltic action, and bowel movements) and minor complaints (such as a runny nose, minor aches and pains, or slightly swollen lymph nodes) into a strong belief of serious problems needing medical attention. Negative results of diagnostic evaluations and reassurance by health care providers only increase the patient's anxious concern about his health, although the concern is not of delusional intensity. adj., adj hypochon´driac, hypochondri´acal.hy·po·chon·dri·a·sis (hī'pō-kon-drī'ă-sis), A morbid concern about one's own health and exaggerated attention to any unusual bodily or mental sensations; a delusion that one is suffering from some disease for which no physical basis is evident. Synonym(s): hypochondria, hypochondriacal neurosis [fr. hypochondrium, regarded as the site of hypochondria, + G. -iasis, condition] hypochondriasis (hī′pə-kən-drī′ə-sĭs)n. pl. hypochondria·ses (-sēz′) See hypochondria.hypochondriasis Hypochondria Psychiatry An exaggerated concern of diseases or medical disorders that can result in psychosomatic Sx; excessive concern for perceived bodily Sx despite assurance that such concern is unfounded. See Medical school syndrome. hy·po·chon·dri·a·sis (hī'pō-kŏn-drī'ă-sis) A morbid concern about one's own health and exaggerated attention to any unusual bodily or mental sensations; a delusion that one is suffering from some disease for which no physical basis is evident. Synonym(s): hypochondria. [fr. hypochondrium, regarded as the site of hypochondria, + G. -iasis, condition]hy·po·chon·dri·a·sis (hī'pō-kŏn-drī'ă-sis) A morbid concern about one's own health and exaggerated attention to any unusual bodily or mental sensations; delusion one is suffering from some disease for which no physical basis is evident. Synonym(s): hypochondria. [fr. hypochondrium, regarded as the site of hypochondria, + G. -iasis, condition]hypochondriasis Related to hypochondriasis: somatization disorderSynonyms for hypochondriasisnoun chronic and abnormal anxiety about imaginary symptoms and ailmentsSynonymsRelated Words |