Disorders attributable to psychosomatic include not only psychosomatic illness in the traditional, narrow sense of the term, but a much broader range of violations: samariterbund disorders, pathological psychogenic reactions to somatic disease. This series also includes mental disorders, often complicated by somatic disorders (anorexia nervosa, bulimia, alcoholism, etc.), disorders of, complicating some of the methods of treatment, such as depression and mental disorders, developing after coronary artery bypass surgery (V. P. Zaitsev et al. 1990; N. I. Skachkova, 1996; S. V. Prokhorov, 1996), affective, alarming and asthenic conditions in patients receiving hemodialysis (M. V. Korkina, V. V. Marilov, 1995).
In a number of studies (AB Smulevich, 2000; B. Tuk et al. 1997) in the framework of the psychosomatic disorders are considered conditions associated with the generative cycle of women (the syndrome of "premenstrual tension" and "premenstrual dysphoric disorder"; depression of pregnant and postpartum depression, including the syndrome of "sad mothers"; involutional hysteria, etc.). To psychosomatic disorders rank as somatogenic (symptomatic) psychoses - delirium, amentia, hallucinosis, etc. ICD-10 (international classification of diseases 10th revision) klassificeret psychosomatic disorders in the following sections: "Organic, including symptomatic, mental disorders" (filed F04-F07 corresponding to the exogenous reactions like, "Neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders" (F44 headings.4-F44.7, corresponding to the psychogenic and F45 - somatoform disorders), as well as "Behavioral syndromes associated with physiological disturbances and physical factors" (column F50-F53).
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