Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8926157 | Medicina Universitaria | 2015 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
We present the case of a 58-year-old male patient who had symptoms of anxiety after witnessing a case of social violence in his community in 2005. After that, he presented symptoms of Parkinson Disease and in 2006 we established this as the main diagnosis. In 2009 he presented neuropsychiatric symptoms such as apathy, anhedonia, social isolation, blunted affect, visual and auditory hallucinations, paranoid delusions, soliloquies, and the false belief that his wife and daughter had been replaced by identical impostors. We established the diagnosis of Capgras Syndrome. This case is clinically relevant because of the presentation of its symptoms, its evolution and its presenting comorbidity.
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Authors
I. Estrada-Bellmann, Y. Ulloa-Escobar, S.L. Barbosa-Flores, R.E. Pech-George, R. González-Treviño, L. Conde-Gómez, A. Marfil-Rivera,