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Leading role of an animal in a schizophrenic delusion. A case-report

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

A. Paraschakis
Affiliation:
Psychiatric Hospital of Attica, ‘Dafni‘, Athens, Greece
G. Molochas
Affiliation:
Psychiatric Hospital of Attica, ‘Dafni‘, Athens, Greece

Abstract

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Aim

To impress the diversity of positive symptoms in patients with schizophrenia.

Method

Case report and review of the literature (PubMed).

Results

Male patient, 43 years old, single, elementary school graduate, living with his mother. First hospitalization.

Clinical features

Persecutory ideas and auditory hallucinations dating from 8 months: he was convinced that his neighbor wanted to harm him; for this reason he had recruited his dog. He noted that the dog was following him when he was going out in the neighborhood, and was very aggressive towards him (he“heard” the dog barking at him continuously). His fear made him stop working (scrap dealer) and he was afraid of coming out of his home. He had even thought of poisoning the animal. Laboratory as well as neuroimaging exams (EEG, brain CT) were normal. The patient was treated with haloperidol (30 mg daily) and olanzapine (15 mg daily). He was discharged after 18 days. Three months later, he spontaneously stopped medication (15 mg olanzapine daily); in three weeks time the same ideas had resurfaced and was “hearing” the neighbor's dog barking again loudly at him. Since then he takes his medication regularly without experiencing any symptoms. Only one relevant article was found in the literature (Dening, T.R., and West, A.“The Dolittle phenomenon: hallucinatory voices from animals”, Psychopathology. 1990; 23: 40–45).

Conclusions

Animals could, rarely, play a key role in the delusional ideas of patients with schizophrenia. This doesn’t make these ideas less debilitating or even potentially dangerous.

Type
P03-300
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2011
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