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The “roundabout Man” Trapped in the “roundabout City” – a Case Report of a Severe Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2020

J. Ribeiro da Silva
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Centro Hospitalar Tondela Viseu, Viseu, Portugal
A. Albuquerque
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Centro Hospitalar Tondela Viseu, Viseu, Portugal
J.H. Silva
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Centro Hospitalar Tondela Viseu, Viseu, Portugal

Abstract

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Introduction

Obsessive compulsive disorder is a severe and disabling clinical condition that usually arises in late adolescence or early adulthood and, if left untreated, has a chronic course.

Objectives

To report and discuss a clinical case, followed by the authors.

Aims/Methods

Consultation of the patient's medical file, serial clinical evaluations and scientific literature review.

Results

33 years-old male, married, degree in economics. Observed in the emergency room for having thoughts dominated by ideas of obsessive content, with a sense of self-reference, associated with recurrent compulsions as cleaning and checking rituals, consequential high levels of hopelessness and a depressive mood, with jeopardized chronobiological rhythms.

This clinical condition started seven years before and seriously undermined the patient’s autonomy. Some of the difficulties outlined by the patient are: on his way to and from work, whenever he passed by a crosswalk he would circle the following roundabout several times, to confirm that he hadn't run over any pedestrian; at the end of the day, he would go through the same path in reverse, by bicycle, to confirm that no pedestrians had been run over by him. After two years of psychopharmacological and cognitive-behavioral therapy the patient showed significant clinical improvement.

Conclusions

On this case, the most likely diagnosis is an Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. The particularity of this case lays on its severity, given its evolution period, the psychopathological richness demonstrated and the functional commitment of the patient; and in the significant clinical improvements observed, largely due to optimal patient adherence to treatment.

Type
Article: 1498
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2015
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