Literature DB >> 10965550

A disturbed child's use of a public event: Cotard's syndrome in a ten-year-old.

J R Allen1, B Pfefferbaum, D Hammond, L Speed.   

Abstract

Public events can be incorporated into the mental life and life narratives of children with psychiatric illnesses. A 10-year-old boy who was not in Oklahoma City at the time of the 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building and who knew no one directly impacted, claimed that he himself was dead, then that his grandfather, and finally that a peer and the peer's family had been killed in the blast. This is the first known reported case of Cotard's syndrome, the delusion of being dead, in a prepubescent child. The article also explores the relationships between this boy's symptoms, transference phenomena, real life events, themes of loss, abandonment, neglect, and death, and his fabricated stories.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10965550     DOI: 10.1080/00332747.2000.11024912

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatry        ISSN: 0033-2747            Impact factor:   2.458


  2 in total

Review 1.  Children's response to terrorism: a critical review of the literature.

Authors:  Betty Pfefferbaum; Rose L Pfefferbaum; Robin H Gurwitch; Sridevi Nagumalli; Edward N Brandt; Madeline J Robertson; Alexandra Aceska; Vishal S Saste
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 5.285

2.  Recurrent postictal depression with Cotard delusion.

Authors:  D N Mendhekar; Neeraj Gupta
Journal:  Indian J Pediatr       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 1.967

  2 in total

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