Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 1 de 1
Filter
Add filters








Language
Year range
1.
Rev. chil. neuro-psiquiatr ; 43(2): 137-142, abr.-jun. 2005.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-498182

ABSTRACT

Se presentan dos casos de síndrome de Capgras (SC) en mujeres con enfermedad de Alzheimer. Ambas tenían la convicción delirante de que su esposo no era tal sino que un impostor; la primera en forma consistente y duradera, la segunda en forma fluctuante. La revisión de la literatura permite comparar el SC con la paramnesia reduplicativa y el “jamais vu” y contrastarlo con la prosopagnosia. La fisiopatología del SC dependería de que al percibir un rostro se procesan en forma paralela a) los detalles visuales que permiten reconocerlo como un rostro característico (capacidad que se pierde en la prosopagnosia), y b) la respuesta emocional que se pierde en el SC. La pérdida de familiaridad de una persona conocida induce la sensación de que se trata de un impostor. Los estudios de imágenes funcionales permiten suponer que en el procesamiento de los rostros y voces familiares participa en forma destacada la parte posterior del girus cingulado.


Two cases Capgras syndrome (CS) are presented in women with Alzheimer’s disease. Both patients had the conviction that their husbands had been supplanted by an impostor; in the first one consistently and permanently, and the second one in a fluctuating form. Revision of the literature allows to compare CS with reduplicative paramnesia and “jamais vu”; and contrast these with prosopagnosia. The physiopathology of CS can be explained by assuming that during face recognition two processes are participating in parallel: a) the recognition of visual details, that allow identification of a face (which is lost in prosopagnosia), and b) the emotional response, which is lost in CS. The loss of familiarity of a known person induces the sensation of an impostor. Functional imaging studies suggest that the posterior cingulate gyrus has a predominant role in the processing of familiar faces and voices.


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Aged, 80 and over , Alzheimer Disease/complications , Prosopagnosia/etiology , Capgras Syndrome/complications
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL