Objective: The somatic component of depression is an important clinical phenomenon. The role of somatic amplification, alexithymia, anger and symptom attribution has been investigated in the genesis of the somatic symptoms of depression.
Method: The study was carried out with 32 patients attending the outpatient psychiatry clinics of Karadeniz Technical University Medical School, meeting the diagnosis of depression according to DSM-IV, and 34 healthy subjects. The subjects were assessed with the Beck Depression Scale, the Beck Anxiety Scale, the Hamilton Depression Scale, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale, the Somatosensory Amplification Scale, the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale the Spielberger State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory, the Symptom Interpretation Questionnaire and a data form for recording sociodemographic characteristics.
Results: The sociodemographic characteristics of the sample were similar. The anxiety, alexithymia, and anger-in scores were significantly higher, while anger-control scores were significantly lower in the depressive subjects. Psychologizing attributes were positively correlated with depression and anxiety. Normalizing was negatively correlated with anxiety. Somatizating was correlated with the difficulty in identifying feelings subscale of alexithymia.
Discussion: These findings show that depressive patients are more alexithymic, have more difficulty in controlling their anger and introject their anger more compared to the healthy controls. Depressed and anxious subjects psychologize, and subjects with difficulty in identifying emotions somatize their symptoms.
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