Psychosomatics

Author:Prof. Dr. med. Peter Altmeyer

All authors of this article

Last updated on: 29.10.2020

Dieser Artikel auf Deutsch

Requires free registration (medical professionals only)

Please login to access all articles, images, and functions.

Our content is available exclusively to medical professionals. If you have already registered, please login. If you haven't, you can register for free (medical professionals only).


Requires free registration (medical professionals only)

Please complete your registration to access all articles and images.

To gain access, you must complete your registration. You either haven't confirmed your e-mail address or we still need proof that you are a member of the medical profession.

Finish your registration now

DefinitionThis section has been translated automatically.

Teaching of the connections between emotional processes and a number of diseases where organic findings alone are not sufficient to explain a disease. In the foreground of classical psychosomatics are diseases such as bronchial asthma, duodenal ulcer, ulcerative colitis and high blood pressure. More recently, the term psychosomatic medicine has come to include all diseases in which a connection between the experience and behaviour of a person and a disease can be recognised or for which psychological methods represent a prevention of the disease, e.g. atopic eczema, chronic back or headaches, diseases from the group of autoimmune diseases. It should be remembered that psychological consequences due to a medical disease factor also belong to psychosomatics.

Authors

Last updated on: 29.10.2020