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Differential Diagnosis Between Schizophrenia and in Major Depression: The Importance of Abnormal Bodily Phenomena

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

M. Mancini*
Affiliation:
University “G. D’Annunzio”, Department of Psychological – Humanistic and Territorial Sciences, Chieti, Italy
G. Stanghellini
Affiliation:
University “G. d’ Annunzio”, Department of Psychological – Humanistic and Territorial Sciences, Chieti, Italy
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

Anomalies of bodily experience have for long been described as relevant features of schizophrenia and major depression, yet such experiences are usually neglected in clinical examination. Bodily experience is the implicit background of our experiences against which we develop a coherent sense of self as a unified, bounded entity, naturally immersed in a social world of meaningful others. Such tacit experiential background is often perturbed in schizophrenia and major depression. Empirical research shows that patients with schizophrenia and major depression frequently present many different kinds of anomalies of bodily experience in the course of their illness.

Objective

To characterize the abnormal bodily phenomena in both schizophrenia and major depression.

Aim

To improve differential diagnosis based on the identification of typical features of abnormal bodily experiences in persons affected by schizophrenia and major depression and to provide supplementary diagnostic criteria.

Method

Analysis of empirical and theoretical research published in the last 25 years.

Result

Ongoing bodily feelings of disintegration/violation and nothingness/mechanization (e.g. one's body experienced as a object-like mechanism) are the most typical experiences in people with schizophrenia whereas major depressives are not able to detach themselves from the experience of bodily failure or chrematization (from chrema = corpse, i.e., feeling like a corpse) and therefore, feel worthless, guilty, or decaying. They feel chrematized in their very self.

Conclusion

These experiences might be considered as specific and they can contribute to differential diagnosis of somatic complaints in schizophrenia and in major depression.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
EV982
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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