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- Larissa Avilés-Santa, Timothy K Wolff, and Philip Raskin.
- Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Clinical Diabetes, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390-8858, USA.
- J. Diabetes Complicat. 2003 May 1;17(3):145-52.
AbstractIntractable nausea and vomiting have been described in individuals without any underlying physical etiology explaining these complaints. Physical or emotional abuse has been described in individuals suffering from these symptoms and associated with somatoform disorders manifesting primarily as gastrointestinal complaints. We present five patients with long-standing Type 1 diabetes who suffered from intractable vomiting. Personality disorders, profound depression and emotional abuse dramatically influenced the course of these patients' illness. In most of the patients, physical symptoms remarkably improved after identification and removal of the triggering factors. Therefore, psychogenic vomiting must be considered among the differential diagnoses of intractable nausea and vomiting, especially in individuals with chronic illnesses. A careful search for a physical etiology and medical treatment that does not cause relief of symptoms should suggest that there is almost certainly a psychological issue at the root of the problem.
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