Psychiatric disorders and pain: The recurrence of a comorbidity

被引:0
|
作者
Vyshka, Gentian [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Med, Dept Biomed & Expt, Fac Med, Tirana 1005, Albania
关键词
Pain; Sensory processing; Psychiatry; Nervous system; Sensitization; DEPRESSIVE-DISORDERS; DYNAMICS; SYMPTOM; ORIGIN;
D O I
10.12998/wjcc.v10.i27.9550
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Painful conditions are probably among the most frequent reasons for seeking medical advice and assistance. Although pain is a common complaint among psychiatric patients, clinicians generally separate its presence from the background mental disorder and downplay its importance, trying primarily to control the psychiatric symptomatology. As a sensory modality, the presence of pain and its importance account for an impressive body of scholarly research. Cartesian methodology considered sensations of all modalities in a mechanistic form, which actually sounds obsolete. However, authors have continuously been faced with the same dilemmas plaguing scholars for centuries. We assume that a large portion of the sensory inputs might be generators of distorted perceptions, which subsequently lead to psychopathology. Auditory and visual hallucinations are incontestable examples. Somaesthetic hallucinations also exist, but pain hardly deserves such a denomination. Nevertheless, chronic pain and psychiatric comorbidity is a reality that needs explanation. Painkillers are not effective in treating psychiatric disorders, and antipsychotics do very little, perhaps nothing, to relieve pain. The pharmacological approach opens one door on the horizon and closes many others, while clinicians continue to face a high prevalence of comorbid pain and mental health issues. However, attempts to correlate altered body schemata ( as distorted as it may be, for example, in phantom limb pain) with somatic delusions can simplify all these dilemmas, and the basket of psychophysiology, in fact, might be bigger than presumed.
引用
收藏
页码:9550 / 9555
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Comorbidity of substance abuse and other psychiatric disorders
    Hafeiz, HB
    ANNALS OF SAUDI MEDICINE, 1996, 16 (04) : 464 - 467
  • [42] Comorbidity between neurological illness and psychiatric disorders
    Hesdorffer, Dale C.
    CNS SPECTRUMS, 2016, 21 (03) : 230 - 238
  • [43] THE INCIDENCE AND COMORBIDITY OF PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS IN OBESITY
    BERMAN, WH
    BERMAN, ER
    HEYMSFIELD, S
    FAUCI, M
    ACKERMAN, S
    JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS, 1992, 6 (02) : 168 - 175
  • [44] COMORBIDITY OF FIBROMYALGIA WITH MEDICAL AND PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS
    HUDSON, JI
    GOLDENBERG, DL
    POPE, HG
    KECK, PE
    SCHLESINGER, L
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1992, 92 (04): : 363 - 367
  • [45] PSYCHIATRIC COMORBIDITY IN EATING DISORDERS - PSYCHOPATHOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS
    TAKAOKA, K
    PSYCHIATRY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCES, 1995, 49 (01) : 25 - 34
  • [46] Temperament dimensions explain the comorbidity of psychiatric disorders
    Battaglia, M
    Przybeck, TR
    Bellodi, L
    Cloninger, CR
    COMPREHENSIVE PSYCHIATRY, 1996, 37 (04) : 292 - 298
  • [47] Bayesian Nonparametric Comorbidity Analysis of Psychiatric Disorders
    Ruiz, Francisco J. R.
    Valera, Isabel
    Blanco, Carlos
    Perez-Cruz, Fernando
    JOURNAL OF MACHINE LEARNING RESEARCH, 2014, 15 : 1215 - 1247
  • [48] Comorbidity of substance abuse with other psychiatric disorders
    Palomo, Tomas
    Archer, Trevor
    Kostrzewa, Richard M.
    Beninger, Richard J.
    NEUROTOXICITY RESEARCH, 2007, 12 (01) : 17 - 27
  • [49] Comorbidity of substance abuse with other psychiatric disorders
    Kemmerling, K
    Haller, R
    Hinterhuber, H
    NEUROPSYCHIATRIE, 1997, 11 (03): : 128 - 133
  • [50] Comorbidity psychiatric disorders in epilepsy: a review of literature
    Titlic, M.
    Basic, S.
    Hajnsek, S.
    Lusic, I
    BRATISLAVA MEDICAL JOURNAL-BRATISLAVSKE LEKARSKE LISTY, 2009, 110 (02): : 105 - 109