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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Case report of an adolescent with Capgras Syndrome in the absence of organic brain syndrome is presented. Four cardinal features associated with Capgras Syndrome--(1) moderate-to-severe anxiety or stress, (2) ambivalent love-hate relationships with important love objects, (3) body image distortion, and (4) rejection-abandonment phenomena--were developed vis-a-vis the developmental tasks of adolescence. The literature consisting of 75 case reports is reviewed from the standpoint of differential diagnosis especially with respect to organic brain syndromes and schizophrenia.
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PMID:Capgras syndrome: case report of an adolescent and review of literature. 68 Dec 93

Two hundred and sixty case reports of misidentification syndromes were evaluated. One hundred and seventy-four patients had a Capgras syndrome misidentifying other persons, 18 a Fregoli syndrome, 11 intermetamorphosis, 17 reduplicative paramnesia and the rest had other forms or combinations of mistaken identification. Schizophrenia (127 cases), mostly of paranoid type, affective disorder (29), and organic mental syndromes including dementia (46) were the most common diagnoses in patients who misidentified others or themselves. The patients with reduplicative paramnesia more frequently suffered from head trauma or cerebral infarction and showed more features of right hemisphere lesions on neuropsychological testing or CT scan than the patients with other misidentification syndromes. Forty-one case-reports implicated underlying medical conditions. Forty-six of the patients were reported to show violent behaviour. The misidentification of persons can be a manifestation of any organic or functional psychosis, but the misidentification of place is frequently associated with neurological diseases, predominantly of the right hemisphere. Misidentification syndromes show a great degree of overlap and do not represent distinctive syndromes nor can they be regarded as an expression of a particular disorder. These patients deserve special diagnostic and therapeutic attention because of the possible underlying disorders and their potentially dangerous behaviour.
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PMID:Psychiatric, neurological and medical aspects of misidentification syndromes: a review of 260 cases. 178 Apr 3

Six consecutive patients who had had temporal lobe surgery for epilepsy, and been referred for psychiatric assessment of psychotic symptoms, are reported. Their symptoms (a delusional depression, four schizophrenia-like illnesses, and a case of Capgras' syndrome) are discussed in relation to the possible role of their operations, all of which were on the right hemisphere.
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PMID:Psychosis following temporal lobe surgery: a report of six cases. 189 29

We present a case of schizophrenia with the multiplication of other persons. The delusion in our case may be considered as that of Capgras syndrome but the former is different from the latter in some ways. In the delusion of our case, there occurred the disintegration of mind and body. We considered this disintegration in relation to schizophrenic destruction. We recognize the destruction of ambiguity in schizophrenia. That is, two dimensions that construct ambiguity are broken up and become independent from each other. In the delusion of our case, the ambiguity in the living body was destroyed. This destruction seems to be based on the schizophrenic though disorder: the cohesion of the concrete and overabstract.
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PMID:A case of schizophrenia with the multiplication of other persons--the destruction of ambiguity. 207 6

The authors have presented a description and review of the Capgras Syndrome along with data from a case series of 25 patients with misidentification syndromes (24 Capgras Syndrome, 1 Fregoli Syndrome). From this data, the following conclusions can be drawn: The Capgras Syndrome is not a rare condition, but an uncommon one which is probably frequently overlooked. The misidentification syndrome is not important as a diagnostic entity. It appears in a variety of psychiatric and neurologic conditions. Capgras Syndrome appears to have a possible neurological link in clinicopathological studies; it has been correlated with lesions which produce prosopagnosia. Capgras Syndrome seems to occur more frequently in women, blacks and schizophrenics. Capgras Syndrome had a high (15%) incidence in our adult inpatients diagnosed as having schizophrenia. From this figure we estimate a 0.12% prevalence of Capgras Syndrome in the general population. Capgras Syndrome is often associated with medical illness and when found should signal the alert clinician to investigate for occult organic conditions.
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PMID:Capgras syndrome: a literature review and case series. 374

The author report a case of Capgras' syndrome in a 12-years-old girl, who had been hospitalized for attacks of abdominal pain. These symptoms had gone on for two years and led twice to surgical interventions which did not find any organic etiology. Interviews with the girl showed that the abdominal pains were related to symptoms of typical panic attacks which lasted about 20 minutes. In some on them, she experienced multiple autoscopy and the "illusion des sosies", described by Capgras. Long-term evolution showed that Capgras' syndrome disappeared with improvement of the panic attacks, but ten years later the patient is still suffering from generalized anxiety. To our knowledge, no case, even in adult patients, was previously described in the context of panic attacks. Furthermore, Capgras' syndrome is particularly rare at adolescence. Our review of literature exhibits only 19 cases under 18. Diagnosis was available in 16 cases, and consisted of schizophrenia or schizophreniform psychosis in 62.5% of the cases. The others involved acute psychosis (2 cases), post-partum psychosis (1 case), drug-induced-psychosis (1 case), psychotic major depression (1 case), and post-varicella encephalitis (1 case). The doubles (out of the 15 cases where relevant detail is available) included at least a parent in 92.9% of patients, a brother or sister in 35.7%, a member of the medical team in 21.4% and a grand-parent in 14.3%.
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PMID:[Capgras syndrome in adolescence: a review apropos of one case]. 867 74

Twenty-three patients with one or more delusional misidentification syndromes were studied. The majority of the subjects were females and the Capgras syndrome was the most common delusional misidentification syndrome in our sample. The Capgras syndrome cases were significant older than the Fregoli syndrome cases. Schizophrenia and schizo-affective psychosis were significantly associated with Fregoli syndrome. Discriminant function analysis was carried out on the sample and showed that age and symptoms of nuclear schizophrenia were the variables most predictive of the type of delusional misidentification. These findings are discussed in the light of current literature.
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PMID:Delusional misidentification syndromes: a descriptive study. 886 50

In this article the epidemiology, aetiology, neuroanatomy and neuropsychology of the Capgras syndrome (CS) are reviewed in detail. CS is characterized by the delusional belief that one or a few highly familiar people have been replaced by impostors who are physically very similar to the original/s. The patient acknowledges that the double and known person look alike, but maintains the belief that the significant person, in psychological terms, is absent. CS is relatively rare, occurring predominantly in the context of schizophrenia, and was traditionally considered to have its origins in psychodynamic conflict. More recently, however, it has been estimated that between 25 and 40% of cases are associated with organic disorders, which include dementia, head trauma, epilepsy and cerebrovascular disease. Neuroimaging evidence suggests a link between CS and right hemisphere abnormalities, particularly in the frontal and temporal regions. Neuropsychological research has provided empirical support for these findings, by consistently reporting the presence of impairments in facial processing--an established right hemisphere function. It is likely that the study of this symptom will lead to a greater understanding of the neurological basis of psychotic experiences and may provide a paradigm for how the psychoses should be investigated.
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PMID:A review of the phenomenology and cognitive neuropsychological origins of the Capgras syndrome. 1002 36

Hallucinations and paranoid delusions are recognised complications of critical illness. However, the occurrence of Capgras syndrome, in response to critical illness, where patients are convinced that doubles have replaced close family has not been described in the literature. There have been isolated case histories in the literature in response to medical procedures or illness but mostly in patients suffering from schizophrenia. A 42 year old woman was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) with pneumonia, following extensive surgery for a squamous cell carcinoma, secondary to Crohns disease. She had no history of previous head injury, cerebro-vascular problems or psychiatric disorder. She reported having memories of all her family, with the exception of her mother, being replaced by aliens while she was on the ICU. The delusion was only diagnosed once it had resolved and the patient was able to talk, and this highlights the difficulty of diagnosing delusions while patients are still intubated and unable to verbalise their concerns. It has been suggested that a defect in the ability to recognise the emotional significance of the face lies at the root of Capgras syndrome.
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PMID:A case of Capgras delusion following critical illness. 1055 82

Capgras syndrome, the delusion that identical-appearing impostors have replaced familiar people, is an unusual phenomenon usually seen in schizophrenia or dementia. We recently cared for a 78 year old man who seemed to develop Capgras syndrome as an adverse reaction to diazepam. An iatrogenic cause should be considered in the differential diagnosis of any new delusion, including Capgras syndrome.
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PMID:Capgras syndrome related to diazepam treatment. 1474 25


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