Somatic symptom disorder (SSD formerly known as “somatization disorder” or “somatoform disorder”) is a form of mental illness that causes one or more bodily symptoms, including pain. The symptoms may or may not be traceable to a physical cause including general medical conditions, other mental illnesses, or substance abuse. But regardless, they cause excessive and disproportionate levels of distress. The symptoms can involve one or more different organs and body systems, such as:

Pain

Neurologic problems

Gastrointestinal complaints

Sexual symptoms

Many people who have SSD will also have an anxiety disorder.

People with SSD are not faking their symptoms. The distress they experience from pain and other problems they experience are real, regardless of whether or not a physical explanation can be found. And the distress from symptoms significantly affects daily functioning.

Several conditions related to SSD are now described in psychiatry. These include:

Illness Anxiety Disorder (formerly called Hypochondriasis). People with this type are preoccupied with a concern they have a serious disease. They may believe that minor complaints are signs of very serious medical problems. For example, they may believe that a common headache is a sign of a brain tumor.

Conversion disorder (also called Functional Neurological Symptom Disorder). This condition is diagnosed when people have neurological symptoms that can’t be traced back to a medical cause. For example, patients may have symptoms such as:

Weakness or paralysis

Abnormal movements (such as tremor, unsteady gait, or seizures)

Blindness

Hearing loss

Loss of sensation or numbness

Seizures (called nonepileptic seizures and pseudoseizures)

Stress usually makes symptoms of conversion disorder worse.

Other Specific Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders. This category describes situations in which somatic symptoms occur for less than six months or may involve a specific condition called pseudocyesis, which is a false belief women have that they are pregnant along with other outward signs of pregnancy, including an expanding abdomen; feeling labor pains, nausea, fetal movement; breast changes; and cessation of the menstrual period.

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