The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has updated its Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including with new information specifically addressed to individuals in the European Economic Area. As described in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, this website utilizes cookies, including for the purpose of offering an optimal online experience and services tailored to your preferences.

Please read the entire Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. By closing this message, browsing this website, continuing the navigation, or otherwise continuing to use the APA's websites, you confirm that you understand and accept the terms of the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including the utilization of cookies.

×
LettersFull Access

A Probable Case of Reduplicative Paramnesia Status-Post Right Fronto-Temporal Cerebrovascular Accident, Treated Successfully With Risperidone

To the Editor: Generally associated with right hemisphere and frontal lobe pathology, reduplicative paramnesia is a content-specific delusion that a familiar place has been duplicated or relocated. We present a patient status after a right fronto-temporal cerebrovascular accident (CVA) who subsequently developed reduplicative paramnesia.The delusional misidentification syndrome (DMS) is a rare neuropsychiatric phenomenon that can occur in both medical and psychiatric conditions. Reduplicative paramnesia (RP) is a content-specific DMS in which a patient misidentifies a familiar place, with delusional conviction.1 There does appear to be a consensus that RP may have a neurologic rather than psychiatric cause and that right and bifrontal lesions are common factors in its presentation.2 We present here the case of a patient with new-onset reduplicative delusions status post-right frontotemporal infarct.

Our patient is a 66-year-old man with history of a CVA and residual left-sided hemiparesis, admitted for “confusion.” Ultimately diagnosed with delirium due to sepsis, the latter was treated successfully with broad-spectrum antibiotics, which resolved his delirium. Although he returned to his cognitive baseline (Mini-Mental State Exam: 28/30) he developed the delusion that his hospital room was actually his home. When asked, he would reply, “everybody is telling me that I am in the hospital, but this is my house.” Physical examination was remarkable for 4/5 left-sided hemiparesis. Computed tomography scan showed right frontal and parieto-occipital cortical and subcortical infarcts. Magnetic resonance imaging done 4 months before this admission showed multifocal right cerebral acute infarcts with frontal/parietal/temporal distribution. He was treated with risperidone up to 1 mg bid, with significant attenuation of his delusion after 17 days of treatment.

DMS is a neuropsychiatric syndrome in which a patient misidentifies familiar people (Capgras, Fregoli’s syndrome) or places/objects (RP) and believes that they have been replaced or transformed.1

Our patient displayed symptoms of RP noted about 5 months after his right frontotemporal CVA. Interestingly, we are not the first to report a case of RP after two temporally separated, bilateral consecutive strokes.3

Similar to our patient, patients with RP usually have lesions in the right hemisphere and/or bifrontal area. One study reviewed the anatomic correlates in a selected series of case reports of patients with misidentification/reduplication. They found that bilateral cortical involvement occurred frequently (41% of patients). In considering cases in which cerebral dysfunction was unilateral, the authors found that right hemispheric predominance in reduplication was highly significant (52% right hemisphere versus 7% left hemisphere).4

A dual mechanism is postulated for the delusional misidentification syndromes/RP: negative effects from right hemisphere and frontal lobe dysfunction as well as positive effects from release (i.e., overactivity) of preserved left-hemisphere areas. A combination of perceptual impairment and reasoning bias creates the basis for delusion; that is, right temporal–limbic–frontal dysfunction gives rise to a distorted sense of familiarity (temporal/limbic) and impaired ability to resolve the delusion via reasoning (frontal).1,5 Left-hemisphere overactivity (posited also to play a critical role in the pathogenesis of delusions) develops after right-sided inhibition is lost.1

Multiple treatments for RP have been reported;2 however, with a limited evidence-base to guide our patient’s treatment, our patient was started and improved on risperidone.

While rare, our patient’s case should remind clinicians to screen for DMS/RP, status post–right-sided CVAs.

Dr. David R. SpiegelDept. of Psychiatry and Behavioral SciencesEastern Virginia Medical School Norfolk, VA
e-mail: Dr. Spiegel;
References

1 Devinsky O: Delusional misidentifications and duplications: right brain lesions, left brain delusions. Neurology 2009; 72:80–87Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

2 Politis M, Loane C: Reduplicative paramnesia: a review. Psychopathology 2012; 45:337–343Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

3 Carota A, Calabrese P: Confabulations after bilateral consecutive strokes of the lenticulostriate arteries. Case Rep Neurol 2012; 4:61–67Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

4 Feinberg TE, Roane DM: Delusional misidentification. Psychiatry Clin North Am 2005; 28:665–683, 678–679Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

5 Moser DJ: Reduplicative paramnesia: longitudinal neurobehavioral and neuroimaging analysis. J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol 1998; 11:174–180Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar