Skip to main content
European Psychiatry logoLink to European Psychiatry
. 2023 Jul 19;66(Suppl 1):S299. doi: 10.1192/j.eurpsy.2023.667

Psychosomatic symptoms according to psychiatric diagnosis

R Fernández Fernández 1,*, L Fontecha Banegas 1, C Suárez Pérez 1, D Gómez Olmeda 1, I D L M Santos Carrasco 1
PMCID: PMC10434077

Abstract

Introduction

Psychosomatic symptoms are an important problem that is frequently presented in medical consultations. These symptoms are often associated with psychiatric disorders, especially depressive and anxiety disorders.

Objectives

To study the association between anxiety disorders and psychosomatic symptoms in a sample of patients referred for pathology of functional origin.

Methods

We made a descriptive retrospective study through the use of electronic medical records. The symptom onset and diagnosis were obtained for all patients referred to outpatients for psychosomatic symptoms during a 1-year period. We performed χ² Tests to assess the association of the diagnosis with the occurrence of psychosomatic symptoms.

Results

The only diagnosis that presented statistically significant association was anxiety disorder (χ² = 11.1; p<0.001).

Anxiety disorder Psychosomatic symptoms No Si Total
No Observed 312 7 319
Expected 306 13.47 319
Yes Observed 119 12 131
Expected 125 5.53 131
Total Observed 431 19 450
Expected 431 19 450

Conclusions

Our study finds results that follow the line of other studies that show this association, such as Campo’s study which finds that functional somatic symptoms are consistently associated cross-sectionally with anxiety and depressive symptoms (Campo, 2012) or Imran’s study which finds that higher levels of somatization independently and significantly predicted higher anxiety (β=.37, p=.0001) (Imran et al., 2013). However, our results show no association with depressive disorders whereas frequent associations are found in the literature; for example, a recent meta-analysis found that neuroticism and depression had the strongest influence on the association of medically unexplained physical symptoms and frequent healthcare use (den Boeft et al., 2016). This lack of association is probably due to greater ease in identifying depressive disorders as the main pathology versus anxiety disorders.

References

Campo J. V. (2012). Annual research review: functional somatic symptoms and associated anxiety and depression--developmental psychopathology in pediatric practice. Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines, 53(5), 575–592. den Boeft, M., Twisk, J. W., Terluin, B., Penninx, B. W., van Marwijk, H. W., Numans, M. E., van der Wouden, J. C., & van der Horst, H. E. (2016). The association between medically unexplained physical symptoms and health care use over two years and the influence of depressive and anxiety disorders and personality traits: a longitudinal study. BMC health services research, 16, 100

Imran, N., Ani, C., Mahmood, Z., Hassan, K. A., & Bhatti, M. R. (2014). Anxiety and depression predicted by medically unexplained symptoms in Pakistani children: a case-control study. Journal of psychosomatic research, 76(2), 105–112.

Disclosure of Interest

None Declared


Articles from European Psychiatry are provided here courtesy of Cambridge University Press

RESOURCES