2021
DOI: 10.1097/pra.0000000000000577
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Commentary: Psychiatric Presentations of Nonpsychiatric Illness or Treatment

Abstract: Patients presenting with psychiatric symptoms, even in cases where there is no clear psychiatric history, are often labeled as having "psychogenic" symptoms or a psychosomatic reaction, and a tendency does exist to mislabel and/or misdiagnose certain patients in medical settings. The 3 cases presented in this issue of the Journal provide examples of patients presenting with psychotic or manic symptoms in the context of an underlying nonpsychiatric medical disorder. Kim and colleagues describe the case of a 65-… Show more

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“…The severity and location of brain injury, particularly in the temporal and frontal lobes, are significant risk factors. [39][40][41] In SSPE, the psychotic symptoms may result from the progressive destruction of brain tissue caused by chronic measles virus infection. One report indicated that individuals with persistent schizophrenia had significantly higher blood antimeasles antibody titers than those without a history of a psychiatric disorder.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The severity and location of brain injury, particularly in the temporal and frontal lobes, are significant risk factors. [39][40][41] In SSPE, the psychotic symptoms may result from the progressive destruction of brain tissue caused by chronic measles virus infection. One report indicated that individuals with persistent schizophrenia had significantly higher blood antimeasles antibody titers than those without a history of a psychiatric disorder.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%