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12 - Somatising: clinical presentations and aetiological factors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Olivia Fiertag
Affiliation:
Locum Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist, Barnet, Enfield and Haringey Mental Health NHS Trust, London, and Honorary Lecturer, Imperial College, London, UK
Mary Eminson
Affiliation:
Retired Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist, Bolton NHS Foundation Trust, Bolton, UK
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Summary

Psychological and physical (somatic) symptoms are closely interconnected, and somatisation (Box 12.1) is commonly seen in both primary and secondary care settings. Somatic symptoms are extremely common in children and adolescents, a population who often find it difficult to express their feelings and emotions through language. It is understood that 2–10% of children in the general population complain of bodily aches and pains (stomach aches, joint pains and headaches) that are likely to be medically unexplained (Garralda, 2005). Sometimes, these symptoms lead to significant distress, impairment in functioning and healthcare-seeking behaviour. Somatising disorders can have a significant impact not only on the children themselves but also on their families and healthcare resources. If somatising continues into adulthood it can lead to wide-ranging distress and impairment.

Developmental factors have an important influence on the presentation of disorders. One such factor is that children and adolescents are dependants, largely reliant on adults for significant aspects of ‘illness behaviour’ (Mechanic, 1962). Illness behaviour includes the way in which symptoms are responded to, and the extent to which medical consultation and lifestyle alterations are undertaken. Parents and carers have a powerful impact when they respond to (or ignore) children's physical complaints, attribute significance to (or give reassurance about) these complaints, facilitate (or otherwise) the children's use of healthcare facilities and involve them in (or withdraw them from) normal life activities.

Box 12.1 Definitions

Medically unexplained symptoms All bothersome or recurrent bodily symptoms that are not due to a recognised medical illness.

Somatisation A constellation of clinical and behavioural features indicating that a person is experiencing and communicating psychological distress through physical symptoms not accounted for by pathological findings; the person attributes these symptoms to a physical illness and seeks medical help. The production of symptoms is usually not under conscious control, although in children and adolescents it is particularly difficult to establish the level of conscious control.

Other developmental factors, especially the level of cognitive and verbal competence, have long been recognised as important determinants of the ability to express emotional distress directly by speech. In young children, a variety of primitive and regressive behaviours are commonly recognised as signalling emotional discomfort of various kinds.

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Publisher: Royal College of Psychiatrists
Print publication year: 2014

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