2018
DOI: 10.1186/s12888-018-1928-z
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Body image in patients with somatoform disorder

Abstract: BackgroundAlthough body-related problems are common in patients with somatoform disorder, research focusing on how patients with somatoform disorder perceive and evaluate their body is scarce. The present study compared differences in body image between patients with somatoform disorder and respondents from a general population sample. It also examined differences within the somatoform disorder group between men and women and between the diagnostic subgroups conversion disorder, pain disorder and undifferentia… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, a link between anxiety and body dissatisfaction was shown for patients with anxiety disorders [19]. We also know that body image tends to be more negative in patients with somatoform or somatic symptom disorder compared with control subjects from the general population [20], indicating that somatization might also be an indicator of an impaired body image.…”
Section: Psychosocial Factorsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Furthermore, a link between anxiety and body dissatisfaction was shown for patients with anxiety disorders [19]. We also know that body image tends to be more negative in patients with somatoform or somatic symptom disorder compared with control subjects from the general population [20], indicating that somatization might also be an indicator of an impaired body image.…”
Section: Psychosocial Factorsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Although there is a paucity of research on body experience in individuals with ID, body experience is important in individuals with ID for three reasons. First of all, as already mentioned, body experience is often disturbed in individuals with psychiatric disorders, including trauma-related disorders (Sack et al, 2010;Scheffers et al, 2017a), anxiety disorders (Aderka et al, 2014), depressive disorders (Scheffers et al, 2019), somatoform disorders (Scheffers et al, 2018), eating disorders (Gaete & Fuchs, 2016), psychotic disorders (Sakson-Obada et al, 2018), and autism spectrum disorders (Schauder et al, 2015). Since psychiatric disorders are significantly more prevalent in individuals with ID than in individuals with (higher than) average IQ (Emerson, 2003;Whitaker & Read, 2006), the same presumably holds for negative body experiences.…”
mentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Higher scores indicate a more positive body experience. Internal consistency of the subscales in a group of patients with somatoform disorder varied from Cronbach's α = 0.78 for "physical contact" and "self-aggrandizement" to 0.92 for the subscale sexual fulfillment; patients with somatoform disorder scored substantially lower on these scales than a non-clinical sample (Scheffers et al, 2018). In this study the total score of the DBIQ is used.…”
Section: Dresden Body Image Questionnaire (Dbiq-35)mentioning
confidence: 99%