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Shared delusions of doubles

G N Christodoulou1, M M Margariti, D E Malliaras

  • 1Athens University Department of Psychiatry, Eginition Hospital, Greece.

Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry
|April 1, 1995
PubMed
Summary
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This study details a rare folie à deux case where two partners shared identical Capgras delusions. It suggests a dominant paranoid partner imposed the delusion onto a submissive partner with organic dysfunction.

Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Psychiatry
  • Psychology

Background:

  • Folie à deux is a rare psychiatric condition where a delusion is shared by two individuals.
  • Capgras delusion involves the false belief that a familiar person or object has been replaced by an identical imposter.

Observation:

  • This case presents the first documented instance of two partners in a folie à deux exhibiting identical Capgras delusions.
  • One partner was dominant with paranoid psychopathology, while the other was submissive with underlying organic dysfunction.

Findings:

  • The submissive partner initially experienced a non-delusional misidentification, which evolved into Capgras syndrome through interaction with the dominant partner.
  • The dominant partner elaborated and imposed the Capgras delusion onto the submissive partner.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Both partners showed evidence of organic cerebral dysfunction, more pronounced in the submissive individual.
  • Implications:

    • This case offers insights into the complex interplay of psychopathology and organic factors in the development of shared delusions.
    • It highlights how interpersonal dynamics can facilitate the manifestation and imposition of specific delusional themes like Capgras syndrome.
    • Understanding these mechanisms is crucial for diagnosing and treating complex shared psychotic disorders.