Do you have any of the following discomforts, but all physical examinations show normal? 1.Foreign body sensation in the throat, hiccups, acid reflux, nausea, vomiting, feeling of fullness, indigestion, diarrhea, constipation, etc. 2, palpitations, feeling of suffocation or pain in the anterior chest area 3.Tightness in the chest, tightness of breath, gasping for air, long outgassing, etc. 4.Urgency, frequent urination, painful urination, waiting for urination, incomplete urination feeling. 5.Itching, numbness, tingling, soreness, suffocating, trembling, ants walking, burning, gasping, heaviness, falling, tightness and other abnormal sensations. 6. Fixed or irregular pain in various parts of the body. Second, does your family always suspect that you have a certain disease? Patients always worry that they are suffering from one or more physical diseases, often focusing on a certain part of the body or organ, such as suspecting that they have lung cancer or venereal disease. What seems to be a normal sensation or appearance to others is seen as abnormal by the patient and often shows symptoms of anxiety and depression such as fidgeting, excessive worrying, loss of appetite, difficulty sleeping, and depressed mood. This is somatoform disorder. What are the prominent manifestations of patients with somatoform disorder? The main manifestation of patients with somatoform disorder is that patients repeatedly state that they are not feeling well, repeatedly go to the doctor, although all kinds of medical tests are normal, or even if the tests are abnormal, they are not consistent with the severity of the current symptoms, and the doctor repeatedly explains but still can not dispel the doubts, and at the same time the patient feels pain and anxiety because of this. In fact, the occurrence of these symptoms is often closely related to unpleasant life events, difficult situations or psychological conflicts, but the patient is often unaware of the presence of psychological factors, and the course of the disease is mostly chronic and prone to fluctuations. What should we do in the face of somatoform disorder? For patients who have been diagnosed with somatoform disorder, first of all, as the patient’s family, we should listen carefully to the patient’s complaints, understand his situation, neither hastily deny his condition and symptoms, nor arbitrarily give assurances, nor blindly make all kinds of unnecessary tests, take the initiative to take the patient to the mental health doctor or psychologist for professional treatment, and help the patient to carry out the necessary medication according to medical advice. Secondly, the patient should actively cooperate with the psychiatrist for psychotherapy, find out the psychosocial factors related to the onset of the disease, gradually comprehend the problem with the help of the psychiatrist, and change the concept of suspicion. Somatoform disorders are not terrible, and by insisting on the combination of medication and psychotherapy, effective treatment results can be obtained and relapse can be reduced.