Results 21 to 30 of about 76 (47)

Somatoform disorders.

open access: yesThe Western journal of medicine, 2002
Albert, Yeung, He, Deguang
openaire   +1 more source

Somatoform Disorders

American family physician, 2008
Abstract Somatic sensations and symptoms are part and parcel of everyday life, with about 75% of the general population experiencing some form of mild to severe physical complaint in any given month (Kellner, 1986; Kroenke, 2003). In most cases these symptoms spontaneously subside, but in about 25% of the sufferers (Kroenke, 2003) these ...
Bouman, T.K., Eifert, G.H
  +6 more sources

Somatoform Disorders

Seminars in Neurology, 2009
The fields of neurology and psychiatry were originally practiced as a unitary model. As the fields dichotomized patients into "organic" and "functional," patients with medically unexplained symptoms fell between the borderlands. Despite their significant prevalence, somatoform disorders (SDs) are grossly under-recognized and lack effective treatments ...
David Coghill   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Somatoform Disorders

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1987
Somatoform disorders are characterized by physical complaints which have no organic basis and are commonly seen by both generalists and specialists. A case report and clinical descriptions of the major somatoform disorders are presented and recommendations for clinical management made.
openaire   +2 more sources

[Somatoform disorders].

Ryoikibetsu shokogun shirizu, 2003
Abstract Patients present to physicians for evaluation of a wide variety of somatic complaints. Sometimes it isn’t clear to what extent these complaints are physical or “psychological” in nature, especially when assessment for commonly associated physical conditions is unrevealing.
Ken, Inoue   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Somatoform Disorders

2004
Abstract Although somatoform disorders are among the most common psychiatric conditions in primary care patient populations (Spitzer et al., 1994), they are not disorders that psychologists com-monly treat. This is largely because patients with these disorders resist considering their conditions as psychological; they are fixated on ...
David Servan-Schreiber   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Somatoform pain disorder

Neurorehabilitation, 1997
Chronic pain is common; it is found in up to 15% of randomly selected population samples, and psychosocial factors including those provoked by physical trauma associated with industrial and motor vehicular accidents are very common in etiology. The diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder may be appropriate in many of these cases.
openaire   +2 more sources

Somatoform Disorder

2009
Abstract Somatization and conversion disorders comprise two identifiable entities for which, among other things, functional neurological deficits occur in the absence of an identifiable neurological disease or medical explanation.
openaire   +2 more sources

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