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2.
Arq. neuropsiquiatr ; 56(3B): 646-9, set. 1998. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-220892

ABSTRACT

A case of folie à deux dissociative (dissociative hysteria) disorder in an 8 and 12 year-old sister and brother is presented. Illnesses of this type are very rare and there is little medical literature on this subject. Our patients, almost simultaneously, abruptly had complete loss of memory, desorientation. loss of awareness about who they were, and much anxiety, which lasted about 15 hours. Both patients were physically well and no abnormalities were found on physical examination, routines laboratory tests and EEG studies. Speculations about the emotional and interpersonal causes of this illness in these two patients are given.


Subject(s)
Humans , Child , Female , Shared Paranoid Disorder/diagnosis , Electroencephalography , Shared Paranoid Disorder/psychology
3.
Arq. neuropsiquiatr ; 55(3A): 427-30, set. 1997.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-209531

ABSTRACT

A patient who has a nemesis fear as the basic process in his psychoneurosis feels that he is destined to repeat the life course of one of his parents to eventual long-term psychosis, or incapacitating physical illness or death by illness or accident. He feels that this will occur at about same age as that at which his parent suffered his misfortune. The patient during his childhood and adolescence had a traumatic relationship with this parent, and is haunted by guilt feelings about it, and fears that avenging destiny, or nemesis, requires that he pay with a similar misfortune for that which he feels he caused. Thse patients improve much in psychotherapy, but the underlying nemesis fear, though much reduced in severeity, is not entirely eliminated.


Subject(s)
Adult , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Neurotic Disorders/physiopathology , Neurotic Disorders/therapy , Psychotherapy
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