These Are Not the Droids You Are Looking For: Mechanical Variant of Cotard's Syndrome

CONCLUSION: This illustrated sequential presentations of three delusions of misidentification. Upon presentation, she exhibited Capgras syndrome, the delusional belief that a familiar person has been replaced by a double. The nidus for this may have been the discovery that her father had signed her commitment papers. This was followed by the belief she was a double of herself, which is the syndrome of Reverse Subjective Doubles. Finally, she manifested Cotard's syndrome in a previously undescribed manner, believing she had died and become a robot. Cotard's and Capgras syndromes are known to present sequentially rather than concurrently, whereas the patient presented concurrently with all three syndromes. Drug-induced parkinsonism may have made the patient subjectively feel stiff, which she interpreted as being rigid like a robot. She was bradykinetic, did not eat or drink, and had rigidity, suggesting that these were somatic manifestations of her underlying delusion of being a robot or alternatively, may have been the somatic nidus for the delusion. Those who present with Cotard's syndrome warrant evaluation for underlying medical conditions, serving as a substrate for this delusion.FUNDING: No funding.PMID:35477617 | DOI:10.1017/S1092852922000220
Source: CNS Spectrums - Category: Neurology Authors: Source Type: research