Could it be... Tactile Defensiveness?
Might be worth further investigation....
http://www.kidscanlearn.net/tactile.htm
I am an Instructor for mentally disabled adults. I have been working with an older gentalman that is diagnosed with mild retardation and who suffers from extreme anxiety and a short temper. I have been working with him for 3 years now. He will call people names when he don't like what he hears, if one of his peers are talking to another peer and he don't like what he hears they are stupid and he is going to kick there ***. I use verbal praise, verbal redirection, reinforcers of his choice, role playing the skills needed to ignore and show a good attitude and nothing works. He has been on Mellaril and then taken off of that and put on Seraquil. When put on the Seraquil he had a med eval and the doctor decide that it needed to be increased to 800mg a day. The doctor informed me that it might zombie him out a little bit and to come back in a month to see how he is doing. During this time it had made his anxiety worse. We attended his new appointment and the doctor asked me how he was doing and I let him know that he has gotten worse. I asked him about possibly putting him on valiums because he has always taken antisycotic drugs and they have never helped him. The doctor said that he can"t and that it is to addictive. He prescribed him Risperdal and stated that he doesn't want to throw in the towel but if this doesn't work that a good place for him to be is the mental hospital. He said they have straight jackets if he gets out of control. I am very upset at this doctor. He only spends 14 minutes with my consumer and doesn't even know to much about his past and is making comments like that. Is there any drug that you know of that can possibly help. None of the other antisycotic drugs have worked in the past. Thank You
I am an Instructor for mentally disabled adults. I have been working with an older gentalman that is diagnosed with mild retardation and who suffers from extreme anxiety and a short temper. I have been working with him for 3 years now. He will call people names when he don't like what he hears, if one of his peers are talking to another peer and he don't like what he hears they are stupid and he is going to kick there ***. I use verbal praise, verbal redirection, reinforcers of his choice, role playing the skills needed to ignore and show a good attitude and nothing works. He has been on Mellaril and then taken off of that and put on Seraquil. When put on the Seraquil he had a med eval and the doctor decide that it needed to be increased to 800mg a day. The doctor informed me that it might zombie him out a little bit and to come back in a month to see how he is doing. During this time it had made his anxiety worse. We attended his new appointment and the doctor asked me how he was doing and I let him know that he has gotten worse. I asked him about possibly putting him on valiums because he has always taken antisycotic drugs and they have never helped him. The doctor said that he can"t and that it is to addictive. He prescribed him Risperdal and stated that he doesn't want to throw in the towel but if this doesn't work that a good place for him to be is the mental hospital. He said they have straight jackets if he gets out of control. I am very upset at this doctor he only spends 14 minutes with my consumer and doesn't even know to much about his past and is making comments like that. Is there any drug that you know of that can possibly help. None of the other antisycotic drugs have worked in the past. Thank You
This is a complicated question because the key pieces of information aren't available. That is, if a neurologists tests her and finds she has a true loss of sensation in her arms and hands, then you would have to believe this is a medical neurological problem.
But if not, the pattern could be a psychosomatic pattern that may have started with a true physical problem, then the worry and focus on that problem, caused these symptoms to be the substitute for all other stresses and concerns in her life.
Ask the neurologists about the physical exam.
Reflex sympathetic dystrophy syndrome is a chronic condition characterized by severe burning pain and extreme sensitivity to touch.
May be related to the surgery she had