TY - JOUR
T1 - A 67-year-old woman who mistook her daughter for a double
T2 - Differential diagnosis of misidentification delusion Een 67-jarige vrouw die haar dochter voor een dubbelganger hield: De differentiële diagnostiek van misidentificatiewanen
AU - Vinkers, D.J.
AU - Van Der Lubbe, N.
AU - De Reus, R.
AU - De Ruiter, G.C.W.
AU - Pondaag, W.
PY - 2007/12/22
Y1 - 2007/12/22
N2 - A 67-year-old woman developed a misidentification delusion after a right-sided frontally located recurrent convexity meningioma was removed by surgery. After antipsychotic therapy had been established, the patient recovered and the delusions disappeared within a few weeks. A misidentification delusion is a fixed, false belief about the identity of a person, an object, a place, or the time. In the differential diagnosis, psychiatric diseases and neurological diseases are prominent. Patients with a psychiatric disease are usually younger than 40 years, often have a psychiatric history, and usually have other psychotic symptoms like paranoid delusions and hallucinations. Brain tumours and temporal lobectomy have previously been described as a neurological cause of a misidentification delusion; the surgical removal of a meningioma as such has not been previously described. In patients with a misidentification delusion, the connection between the perception of an identity and its accompanying emotions and memories is disturbed. This connection primarily takes place in the right side of the brain, which is in accordance with the location of the removed meningioma in the described patient.
AB - A 67-year-old woman developed a misidentification delusion after a right-sided frontally located recurrent convexity meningioma was removed by surgery. After antipsychotic therapy had been established, the patient recovered and the delusions disappeared within a few weeks. A misidentification delusion is a fixed, false belief about the identity of a person, an object, a place, or the time. In the differential diagnosis, psychiatric diseases and neurological diseases are prominent. Patients with a psychiatric disease are usually younger than 40 years, often have a psychiatric history, and usually have other psychotic symptoms like paranoid delusions and hallucinations. Brain tumours and temporal lobectomy have previously been described as a neurological cause of a misidentification delusion; the surgical removal of a meningioma as such has not been previously described. In patients with a misidentification delusion, the connection between the perception of an identity and its accompanying emotions and memories is disturbed. This connection primarily takes place in the right side of the brain, which is in accordance with the location of the removed meningioma in the described patient.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=37549061828&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
SN - 0028-2162
VL - 151
SP - 2841
EP - 2844
JO - Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde
JF - Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde
IS - 51
ER -