Neurocase. 2024 Dec 24:1-10. doi: 10.1080/13554794.2024.2436207. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
This case study explores the psychological and neuropsychological traits of a 55-year-old woman, D.R., who has Cotard’s, believing her torso has dissolved and food bypasses her legs. Her delusion emerged amid major depressive disorder with psychotic features, following prodromal symptoms like body distortion and somatosensory abnormalities. A neuropsychological assessment during remission revealed low-level visual perceptual deficits in an otherwise intact cognitive profile. Subtle distortions in bodily signals and specific attribution styles were identified as vulnerability factors, suggesting that the delusion may emerge when already strained information processing systems are further challenged. This relates to models of delusion formation.
PMID:39718438 | DOI:10.1080/13554794.2024.2436207
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