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The delusional misidentification syndrome has lately been the object of lengthy psychopathological discussions. Controversies persist as to how best to define it, distinguish its subtypes and set their limits. Attempts to provide this syndrome with a better conceptual framework have usually relied on proposing new definitions and classifications. In this article, we suggest that some prevailing difficulties are basically related to two separate but intertwined issues: the self-reflexive property of the human mental functioning and the first-person linguistic expression of human experience. We argue that this discussion belongs to a broader context than the one it is usually referred to, as it deals with problems germane to conceptual psychopathological investigations in general. In that regard, DMS provides us with a very telling example, to the extent to which it has, at its core, to account for the puzzling phenomena of identity, which are particularly affected by cultural and linguistic variables.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000095777 | DOI Listing |
Case Rep Psychiatry
August 2025
Saint Camillus International University of Health and Medical Sciences, Via di Sant'Alessandro 8, Rome 00131, Italy.
Capgras syndrome (CS) presents a unique diagnostic and management challenge, particularly when associated with neurodegenerative conditions. This case report describes a 73-year-old female diagnosed with Lewy body dementia (LBD) who developed CS, manifesting as the delusional belief that her deceased husband had been replaced by an imposter. The clinical presentation was complex, including pronounced sleep disturbances, cognitive decline, behavioral anomalies, and visual hallucinations, necessitating a thorough differential diagnosis process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Psychiatry
August 2025
Faculty of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Giresun University, Giresun, Turkey.
Background: Capgras syndrome (CS) is a rare delusional disorder characterized by the delusional belief that a relative has been replaced by an identical person. This syndrome is frequently associated with psychotic disorders and neurological diseases.
Case Presentation: In this case report, we describe a 42-year-old woman who developed Capgras syndrome following a severe upper respiratory tract infection.
Brain Sci
June 2025
Neurocenter, Swiss Medical Network, Clinique Valmont, Montreux, Switzerland.
Striking belief distortions may accompany various disorders of awareness that are predominantly associated with right hemispheric cerebral dysfunction. Distortions may range on a continuum of pathological severity, from the unawareness of paralysis in anosognosia for hemiplegia, to a more startling disturbance in denial of paralysis where belief may starkly conflict with reality. The patients' beliefs about their limitations typically represent attempts to make sense of limitations or to impart meaning to incongruous facts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Clin Neuropsychol
June 2025
Columbia, MO, USA.
Introduction: Although the neuropsychological foundations of the self have been poorly understood to date, a neuropsychological model has recently been proposed that suggests that the self is best conceptualized as a "unified experience" that is created when all neuropsychological processes are integrated in the right hemisphere association area to produce a sense of relationship between them (i.e., that they are occurring to the same entity at the same time, place, and context).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCase Rep Psychiatry
May 2025
Department of Neuropsychiatry, Oita University Faculty of Medicine, Yufu, Oita, Japan.
Delusional misidentification syndromes (DMSs) are a group of disorders, characterized by consistent misidentification of individuals, locations, objects, or events. Four primary subtypes are recognized within this classification: Capgras syndrome, Frégoli syndrome, intermetamorphosis syndrome, and the syndrome of subjective doubles. We report a case of a woman with schizophrenia who experienced a strange delusion that her parents were her babies.
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