Chronic Pain, Psychopathology, and DSM-5 Somatic Symptom Disorder

Joel Katz, Brittany N Rosenbloom, Samantha Fashler, Joel Katz, Brittany N Rosenbloom, Samantha Fashler

Abstract

Unlike acute pain that warns us of injury or disease, chronic or persistent pain serves no adaptive purpose. Though there is no agreed on definition of chronic pain, it is commonly referred to as pain that is without biological value, lasting longer than the typical healing time, not responsive to treatments based on specific remedies, and of a duration greater than 6 months. Chronic pain that is severe and intractable has detrimental consequences, including psychological distress, job loss, social isolation, and, not surprisingly, it is highly comorbid with depression and anxiety. Historically, pain without an apparent anatomical or neurophysiological origin was labelled as psychopathological. This approach is damaging to the patient and provider alike. It pollutes the therapeutic relationship by introducing an element of mutual distrust as well as implicit, if not explicit, blame. It is demoralizing to the patient who feels at fault, disbelieved, and alone. Moreover, many medically unexplained pains are now understood to involve an interplay between peripheral and central neurophysiological mechanisms that have gone awry. The new Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, somatic symptom disorder overpsychologizes people with chronic pain; it has low sensitivity and specificity, and it contributes to misdiagnosis, as well as unnecessary stigma. Adjustment disorder remains the most appropriate, accurate, and acceptable diagnosis for people who are overly concerned about their pain.

References

    1. Nagasako EM, Oaklander AL, Dworkin RH. Congenital insensitivity to pain: an update. Pain. 2003;101(3):213–219.
    1. Merskey H, Bogduk N. Classification of chronic pain: descriptions of chronic pain syndromes and definitions of pain terms. 2nd ed. Seattle (WA): International Association for the Study of Pain Press; 1994.
    1. International Association for the Study of Pain Classification of chronic pain. Pain. 1986;(Suppl 3):S1–S225.
    1. Landmark T, Romundstad P, Dale O, et al. Estimating the prevalence of chronic pain: validation of recall against longitudinal reporting (the HUNT pain study) Pain. 2012;153(7):1368–1373.
    1. Schopflocher D, Taenzer P, Jovey R. The prevalence of chronic pain in Canada. Pain Res Manag. 2011;16(6):445–450.
    1. Johannes CB, Le TK, Zhou X, et al. The prevalence of chronic pain in United States adults: results of an Internet-based survey. J Pain. 2010;11(11):1230–1239.
    1. Woolf CJ. What is this thing called pain? J Clin Invest. 2010;120(11):3742–3744.
    1. von Hehn CA, Baron R, Woolf CJ. Deconstructing the neuropathic pain phenotype to reveal neural mechanisms. Neuron. 2012;73(4):638–652.
    1. Latremoliere A, Woolf CJ. Central sensitization: a generator of pain hypersensitivity by central neural plasticity. J Pain. 2009;10(9):895–926.
    1. Woolf CJ. Central sensitization: implications for the diagnosis and treatment of pain. Pain. 2011;152(3 Suppl):S2–S15.
    1. Niv D, Devor M. Chronic pain as a disease in its own right. Pain Pract. 2004;4(3):179–181.
    1. Siddall PJ, Cousins MJ. Persistent pain as a disease entity: implications for clinical management. Anesth Analg. 2004;99(2):510–520.
    1. Tsang A, Von Korff M, Lee S, et al. Common chronic pain conditions in developed and developing countries: gender and age differences and comorbidity with depression-anxiety disorders. J Pain. 2008;9(10):883–891.
    1. Elliott AM, Smith BH, Penny KI, et al. The epidemiology of chronic pain in the community. Lancet. 1999;354(9186):1248–1252.
    1. Boulanger A, Clark AJ, Squire P, et al. Chronic pain in Canada: have we improved our management of chronic noncancer pain? Pain Res Manag. 2007;12(1):39–47.
    1. Moulin DE, Clark AJ, Speechley M, et al. Chronic pain in Canada— prevalence, treatment, impact and the role of opioid analgesia. Pain Res Manag. 2002;7(4):179–184.
    1. Pergolizzi J, Ahlbeck K, Aldington D, et al. The development of chronic pain: physiological CHANGE necessitates a multidisciplinary approach to treatment. Curr Med Res Opin. 2013;29(9):1127–1135.
    1. van Hecke O, Torrance N, Smith BH. Chronic pain epidemiology and its clinical relevance. Br J Anaesth. 2013;111(1):13–18.
    1. Johansen A, Romundstad L, Nielsen CS, et al. Persistent postsurgical pain in a general population: prevalence and predictors in the Tromso study. Pain. 2012;153(7):1390–1396.
    1. Demyttenaere K, Bruffaerts R, Lee S, et al. Mental disorders among persons with chronic back or neck pain: results from the World Mental Health Surveys. Pain. 2007;129(3):332–342.
    1. Von Korff M, Crane P, Lane M, et al. Chronic spinal pain and physical-mental comorbidity in the United States: results from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication. Pain. 2005;113(3):331–339.
    1. Choiniere M, Dion D, Peng P, et al. The Canadian STOP-PAIN Project—part 1: who are the patients on the waitlists of multidisciplinary pain treatment facilities? Can J Anaesth. 2010;57(6):539–548.
    1. Asmundson GJ, Coons MJ, Taylor S, et al. PTSD and the experience of pain: research and clinical implications of shared vulnerability and mutual maintenance models. Can J Psychiatry. 2002;47(10):930–937.
    1. Asmundson GJ, Katz J. Understanding the co-occurrence of anxiety disorders and chronic pain: state-of-the-art. Depress Anxiety. 2009;26(10):888–901.
    1. Katz J, Pagé MG, Fashler S, et al. Chronic pain and the anxiety disorders: epidemiology, mechanisms and models of comorbidity, and treatment. In: Marchand S, Saravane D, Gaumond I, editors. Mental health and pain: somatic and psychiatric components of pain in mental health. Paris (FR): Springer-Verlag; 2014. pp. 119–155.
    1. Wall PD. Pain: the science of suffering. London (GB): Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 1999.
    1. Katz J. Individual differences in the consciousness of phantom limbs. In: Kunzendorf RG, Wallace B, editors. Individual differences in conscious experience: first-person constraints on theories of consciousness, self-consciousness, and subconsciousness. Amsterdam (NL): John Benjamins Publishing Co; 2000. pp. 45–97.
    1. Meana M, Binik YM. Painful coitus: a review of female dyspareunia. J Nerv Ment Dis. 1994;182(5):264–272.
    1. Gagliese L, Katz J. Medically unexplained pain is not caused by psychopathology. Pain Res Manag. 2000;5:251–257.
    1. Graff-Radford SB. Facial pain. Curr Opin Neurol. 2000;13(3):291–296.
    1. Nielson WR, Merskey H. Psychosocial aspects of fibromyalgia. Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2001;5(4):330–337.
    1. Hoffman D. Understanding multisymptom presentations in chronic pelvic pain: the inter-relationships between the viscera and myofascial pelvic floor dysfunction. Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2011;15(5):343–346.
    1. Stoudemire A, Sandhu J. Psychogenic/idiopathic pain syndromes. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 1987;9(2):79–86.
    1. Mannion RJ, Woolf CJ. Pain mechanisms and management: a central perspective. Clin J Pain. 2000;16(3 Suppl):S144–S156.
    1. Coderre TJ, Katz J, Vaccarino AL, et al. Contribution of central neuroplasticity to pathological pain: review of clinical and experimental evidence. Pain. 1993;52(3):259–285.
    1. Dostrovsky JO, Millar J, Wall PD. The immediate shift of afferent drive to dorsal column nucleus cells following deafferentation: a comparison of acute and chronic deafferentation in gracile nucleus and spinal cord. Exp Neurol. 1976;52(3):480–495.
    1. Dostrovsky JO. Immediate and long-term plasticity in human somatosensory thalamus and its involvement in phantom limbs. Pain. 1999;(Suppl 6):S37–S43.
    1. Devor M, Wall PD. Plasticity in the spinal cord sensory map following peripheral nerve injury in rats. J Neurosci. 1981;1:679–684.
    1. Woolf CJ. Evidence for a central component of post-injury pain hypersensitivity. Nature. 1983;306(5944):686–688.
    1. Berkley KJ. A life of pelvic pain. Physiol Behav. 2005;86(3):272–280.
    1. Gracely RH, Lynch SA, Bennett GJ. Painful neuropathy: altered central processing maintained dynamically by peripheral input. Pain. 1992;51(2):175–194.
    1. Basbaum AI. A new way to lose your nerve. Sci Aging Knowledge Environ. 2004;2004(15):pe15.
    1. Livingston WK. In: Pain and suffering. Fields HL, editor. Seattle (WA): International Association for the Study of Pain Press; 1998.
    1. Maleki J, LeBel AA, Bennett GJ, et al. Patterns of spread in complex regional pain syndrome, type I (reflex sympathetic dystrophy) Pain. 2000;88(3):259–266.
    1. Chacur M, Milligan ED, Gazda LS, et al. A new model of sciatic inflammatory neuritis (SIN): induction of unilateral and bilateral mechanical allodynia following acute unilateral peri-sciatic immune activation in rats. Pain. 2001;94(3):231–244.
    1. Milligan ED, Twining C, Chacur M, et al. Spinal glia and proinflammatory cytokines mediate mirror-image neuropathic pain in rats. J Neurosci. 2003;23(3):1026–1040.
    1. Koltzenburg M, Wall PD, McMahon SB. Does the right side know what the left is doing? Trends Neurosci. 1999;22(3):122–127.
    1. Cohen H, McCabe C, Harris N, et al. Clinical evidence of parietal cortex dysfunction and correlation with extent of allodynia in CRPS type 1. Eur J Pain. 2013;17(4):527–538.
    1. Oaklander AL, Romans K, Horasek S, et al. Unilateral postherpetic neuralgia is associated with bilateral sensory neuron damage. Ann Neurol. 1998;44(5):789–795.
    1. Oaklander AL, Brown JM. Unilateral nerve injury produces bilateral loss of distal innervation. Ann Neurol. 2004;55(5):639–644.
    1. Frances A, Chapman S. DSM-5 somatic symptom disorder mislabels medical illness as mental disorder. Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2013;47(5):483–484.
    1. American Psychiatric Association . Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 4th ed. Washington (DC): American Psychiatric Publishing; 2000. Text revision.
    1. American Psychiatric Association . Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 5th ed. Arlington (VA): American Psychiatric Publishing; 2013.
    1. American Psychiatric Association . Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 3rd ed. Washington (DC): American Psychiatric Publishing; 1980.
    1. American Psychiatric Association . Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 3rd ed. Washington (DC): American Psychiatric Publishing; 1987. Revised.
    1. Merskey H. Pain disorder, hysteria or somatization? Pain Res Manag. 2004;9(2):67–71.
    1. Merskey H. Pain, psychogenesis, and psychiatric diagnosis. Int Rev Psychiatry. 2000;12:99–102.
    1. Merskey H. Somatization, hysteria, or incompletely explained symptoms? Can J Psychiatry. 2004;49(10):649–651.
    1. Creed F, Gureje O. Emerging themes in the revision of the classification of somatoform disorders. Int Rev Psychiatry. 2012;24(6):556–567.
    1. Sullivan MD. DSM-IV pain disorder: a case against the diagnosis. Int Rev Psychiatry. 2000;12(2):91–98.
    1. Frances AJ, Widiger T. Psychiatric diagnosis: lessons from the DSM-IV past and cautions for the DSM-5 future. Annu Rev Clin Psychol. 2012;8:109–130.
    1. Frances A. The new somatic symptom disorder in DSM-5 risks mislabeling many people as mentally ill. BMJ. 2013;346:f1580.
    1. Hauser W, Wolfe F. The somatic symptom disorder in DSM 5 risks mislabelling people with major medical diseases as mentally ill. J Psychosom Res. 2013;75(6):586–587.
    1. Rief W, Martin A. How to use the new DSM-5 somatic symptom disorder diagnosis in research and practice: a critical evaluation and a proposal for modifications. Annu Rev Clin Psychol. 2014;10:339–367.
    1. Regier DA, Narrow WE, Clarke DE, et al. DSM-5 field trials in the United States and Canada, part II: test-retest reliability of selected categorical diagnoses. Am J Psychiatry. 2013;170(1):59–70.
    1. Freedman R, Lewis DA, Michels R, et al. The initial field trials of DSM-5: new blooms and old thorns. Am J Psychiatry. 2013;170(1):1–5.
    1. Moscicki EK, Clarke DE, Kuramoto SJ, et al. Testing DSM-5 in routine clinical practice settings: feasibility and clinical utility. Psychiatr Serv. 2013;64(10):952–960.
    1. Malterud K. Symptoms as a source of medical knowledge: understanding medically unexplained disorders in women. Fam Med. 2000;32(9):603–611.
    1. Voigt K, Wollburg E, Weinmann N, et al. Predictive validity and clinical utility of DSM-5 somatic symptom disorder—comparison with DSM-IV somatoform disorders and additional criteria for consideration. J Psychosom Res. 2012;73(5):345–350.
    1. Young G. Ill-treatment of pain in the DSM-5. Psychol Inj Law. 2013;6(4):307–313.
    1. Frances A. DSM-5 somatic symptom disorder. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2013;201(6):530–531.
    1. Woolf CJ, Thompson SW. The induction and maintenance of central sensitization is dependent on N-methyl-d-aspartic acid receptor activation; implications for the treatment of post-injury pain hypersensitivity states. Pain. 1991;44(3):293–299.

Source: PubMed

Подписаться