Hypochondriacal-senestopathic disorder syndrome is a rare mental illness characterized by hypersensitivity to symptoms that the patient believes to be real or imagined physical illnesses or illnesses.
This syndrome can manifest itself as an independent pathology or as one of the components of general hypochondria. Senesthesia can also occur due to other mental disorders, their combinations, as well as due to some physiological problems.
Senesthesia syndrome is a complex of altered sensations in the body associated with neuromuscular and mental pathology. Also called nervous sensations, Cotard's syndrome, obsessive-compulsive disorder, hypochondria, or hysteria, is a general name for pathological conditions in which people complain of neurological problems that they allegedly experience.
Varieties of hypochondriacal disorder syndrome can be as follows: - psychosomatic hypochondriacal syndrome; - undifferentiated chronic multisystem hypochondria; - cerebral-organic senesto-hypochondriacal and affective syndrome;
The disorder is characterized by mild and long-term anxiety or depression, which are characterized by specific conditions in the form of senesthesia (unpleasant tingling, burning, pulsating sensations in various parts of the body). These sensations usually have a long-lasting form, can transform into each other, and quickly transform into new painful sensations (aching pain, etc.). The syndrome is most often observed in women. Pathology has different degrees of severity. Treatment of the disease is long-term, complex, based on changing the patient’s lifestyle and the use of medications.
Hypochondriac-senestopathic syndrome is a mysterious disease of psychiatry that characterizes a serious depressive state, which is based on the idea of the presence of a chronic disease in the body. It is manifested by the absence of a clear picture of the disorder and, as a consequence, the impossibility of its cure. Scientists still cannot accurately determine the causes of the development of the syndrome, but its symptoms indicate the need for an integrated approach to treatment: for example, they may require the use of antidepressants and antipsychotics. To prevent the disease, psychiatrists recommend monitoring physical and emotional health and avoiding nervous overload.
Causes and possible consequences of the syndrome.
There can be many reasons for the occurrence of the syndrome, for example: - Severe stress or prolonged fatigue, neuroses, depression, anxiety, disappointment; - An obsessive feeling of mental illness or physical, sensory and emotional perception of illness; Senistopathy and hypoesthesia. There is a distortion of perception associated with the pathology of individual organs or systems of the body. The patient does not see the world around him, even if he is safe and healthy. Everything bifurcates, becomes deformed or loses any parts. If an organ or system is healthy, then it seems to a person that he has lost part of control over one of them, and if he has, then he has completely lost contact with reality. Senistopathy is divided into: senesthesia (pain), paresthesia, pseudoanesthesia and hyperesthesia. Typically, patients with Seneco-Hippocrates syndrome suffer from several different pathological conditions, with depression and anxiety being the most common. Reach awareness