Title of article :
Self-protective organization in children with conversion and somatoform disorders
Author/Authors :
Kozlowska، نويسنده , , Kasia and Williams، نويسنده , , Leanne M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Objective
nturies of clinical observations have suggested that conversion symptoms are associated with strong emotions or situations that threaten the individualʹs physical or psychological integrity. This study tested the hypothesis that childhood conversion reactions reflect the motor-sensory components of two distinct emotional responses (one inhibitory, one excitatory) that develop as adaptations to recurring threats within intimate relationships.
nal responses to interpersonal threats were assessed in 28 children with conversion disorders using Dynamic-Maturational-Model (DMM) assessments of attachment. Attachment strategies (the inhibitory, Type A; the balanced, Type B; and the excitatory, Type C) provide information about (1) the childʹs behavioural (motor-sensory) organization in the face of interpersonal threats, and (2) the information processing that underpins this behavioural organization.
s
children (43%) used an inhibitory attachment strategy. Twelve (43%) used an excitatory attachment strategy. A smaller group (14%) alternated between inhibitory and excitatory strategies, their conversion symptoms reflecting the latter.
sion
data suggest that conversion reactions are not a single clinical entity and reflect the motor-sensory components of two distinct human emotional responses to threat. This distinction may help to account for the broad range of conversion symptoms seen in clinical practice, both those that involve loss of function and can be explained by a central inhibition hypothesis and those that involve positive symptoms and secondary gain.
Keywords :
Conversion disorder , Somatoform disorder , Dissociative disorder , Dynamic-Maturational model of attachment , DMM , Emotional processing
Journal title :
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Journal title :
Journal of Psychosomatic Research