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The importance of descriptive psychopathology in differential diagnosis of dissociative disorders: A case report

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

L. Oliveira
Affiliation:
Hospital Municipal Jurandyr Manfredini, Ambulatório de Psiquiatria, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
L. Carvalho de Toledo
Affiliation:
Hospital Municipal Jurandyr Manfredini, Ambulatório de Psiquiatria, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
N. Merola Fontoura
Affiliation:
Hospital Municipal Jurandyr Manfredini, Ambulatório de Psiquiatria, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
M. Ribeiro Garcia de Rezende
Affiliation:
Hospital Municipal Jurandyr Manfredini, Ambulatório de Psiquiatria, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
C. Lima de Melo
Affiliation:
Hospital Municipal Jurandyr Manfredini, Ambulatório de Psiquiatria, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
A.F. Macedo de Queiroz
Affiliation:
Hospital Municipal Jurandyr Manfredini, Ambulatório de Psiquiatria, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Abstract

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Introduction

Some kinds of hallucinations are misdiagnosed due to primary psychotic disorders. Hallucinations can be classified into 3 categories: true hallucinations, pseudo-hallucinations and hallucinosis. True hallucinations are different from the others due to incapacity of insight of the unreal and pathologic character of the phenomenon.

Objectives

This study reports a case initially diagnosed as psychotic depression that after a rigorous psychopathologic investigation revealed to be an unspecified dissociative disorder.

Case presentation

Twenty-four-year-old female, with a past of psychiatric treatment since 18-years-old, reports brief dysphoric episodes associated with visions of bleeding clowns and skulls that were always connected to a psychosocial stressor. At the interview she asserts that she understands those symptoms as pathological and caused by her mind, and associate them with external stressors. These episodes were brief and remitted spontaneously. The mental state examination did not show any psychopathological disturbance. The reduction and suspension of antipsychotics did not result in worsening of these symptoms.

Results

The psychopathological disturbances reported by the patient did not represent a true hallucination. The presence of insight, the evolution and duration of the symptoms, and the association with psychosocial stressors has shown that the phenomena and symptoms are associated to a dissociative disorder. Therefore, the prescription of antipsychotics involves unnecessary pharmacological and clinical risks for this patient at the moment.

Conclusion

Despite the use of psychopathology is considered by some as outdated, it is still an important semiological instrument for an accurate diagnosis and planning therapeutic conduct.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
EV998
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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