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The Relationship between Delusions of Sexual Change and Olfactory and Gustatory Hallucinations in Schizophrenia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

F. H. Connolly
Affiliation:
Middlewood Hospital, Sheffield S6 1TP
N. L. Gittleson
Affiliation:
Middlewood Hospital, Sheffield S6 1TP

Extract

Doubt about one's sexual identity and ideas of changing sex have been shown to be typical of sufferers from schizophrenia (Gittleson and Levine, 1966; Gittleson and Dawson-Butterworth, 1967).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1971 

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References

Delgado, J. M. R. (1959). ‘Electronic command of movement and behaviour.’ Transactions of the New York Academy of Science, 21, 689–98.Google Scholar
Gittleson, N. L., and Levine, S. (1966). ‘Subjective ideas of sexual change in male schizophrenics.’ British Journal of Psychiatry, 112, 779–82.Google Scholar
Gittleson, N. L., and Dawson-Butterworth, K. (1967). ‘Subjective ideas of sexual change in female schizophrenics.’ British Journal of Psychiatry, 113, 491–4.Google Scholar
Lucas, C. J., Sainsbury, P., and Collins, J. G. (1962). ‘A social and clinical study of delusions in schizophrenia.’ Journal of Mental Science, 108, 747–58.Google Scholar
Schneider, K. (1957). ‘Primary and secondary symptoms in schizophrenia.’ Fortschr. Neur. Psychiat., 25, 487; Quoted by Fish, F. J. (1962), in Schizophrenia. p. 81. Bristol: John Wright and Sons.Google Scholar
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