Background: This study examined symptom perception in hypochondriacal patients without physical stimulation. Methods: Seventeen outpatients with DSM-III-R hypochondriasis and 16 healthy control subjects were compared. All subjects were asked to report perceived sensations in three conditions: attention, distraction and control. Results: It was found that hypochondriacal subjects showed remarkably higher levels of symptom reporting than healthy subjects in all three conditions. In spite of excessive attention to bodily sensations in a control condition, attention instructions still added significantly to symptom reporting in hypochondriacal patients. The effect of distraction was not significant in either of the groups. Furthermore, group differences in symptom reporting appeared to be related to preoccupation with bodily symptoms rather than to general anxiety level as measured by the STAI. Conclusions: Hypochondriacal patients report more bodily sensations than healthy controls when no instructions are given. In addition, focussing on bodily sensations seems to cause a significant overall increase of perceived symptoms in hypochondriacal patients, whereas in healthy subjects there is a trend towards an increase in symptom reporting.
Background: In his article on amplification, somatization and somatoform disorders Barsky [Psychosomatics 1992;33:28–34] pointed out the importance of studying the perception and processing of somatic and visceral symptoms. Subsequently, it was demonstrated that hypochondriacal patients are not more accurately aware of cardiac activity than a group of non-hypochondriacal patients. Authors concluded that hypochondriacal somatic complaints do not result from an unusually fine discriminative ability to detect normal physiological sensations that non-hypochondriacal patients are unable to perceive. The aim of the present study was to investigate tactual sensitivity to non-painful stimuli in hypochondriacal patients and healthy subjects. Methods: Twenty-seven outpatients with DSM-III-R hypochondriasis and 27 healthy control subjects were compared. In all subjects the two-point discrimination threshold was measured, as well as subjective sensitivity to harmless bodily sensations as measured by the Somatosensory Amplification Scale. Results: It was found that hypochondriacal patients reported more distress and discomfort with benign bodily sensations. The two-point discrimination threshold of hypochondriacal patients was not significantly lower in patients as compared to controls. Conclusions: Hypochondriacal subjects considered themselves more sensitive to benign bodily sensations without being better able to discriminate between two tactual bodily signals. These findings of the present study correspond quite closely to those reported earlier.
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