| Literature DB >> 19412462 |
Anna E M Holt1, Martin L Albert.
Abstract
Assessments and clinical understanding of late-onset delusions in the elderly are inconsistent and often incomplete. In this review, we consider the prevalence, neurobehavioral features, and neuroanatomic correlations of delusions in elderly persons - those with documented cognitive decline and those with no evidence of cognitive decline. Both groups exhibit a common phenotype: delusions are either of persecution or of misidentification. Late-onset delusions show a nearly complete absence of the grandiose, mystical, or erotomanic content typical of early onset psychoses. Absent also from both elderly populations are formal thought disorders, thought insertions, and delusions of external control. Neuroimaging and behavioral studies suggest a frontotemporal localization of delusions in the elderly, with right hemispheric lateralization in delusional misidentification and left lateralization in delusions of persecution. We propose that delusions in the elderly reflect a common neuroanatomic and functional phenotype, and we discuss applications of our proposal to diagnosis and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: aging; cognitive neuroscience; delusions; dementia
Year: 2006 PMID: 19412462 PMCID: PMC2671775 DOI: 10.2147/nedt.2006.2.2.181
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Delusions in the elderly
| Delusion type | Delusion content | Percentage of delusions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delusions of theft | Persecutory | Patient is being robbed of possessions | 20–75 |
| Delusions of suspicion–physical anger | Persecutory | Harm to patient or patient’s loved ones | 11–30 |
| Delusions of jealousy | Persecutory | Spouse is unfaithful | 3–16 |
| Misidentification of familiar persons | Misidentification | Familiar person is misidentified | 16 |
| Misidentification of objects | Misidentification | Familiar object is misidentified | 10–20 |
| Capgras delusion | Misidentification | Familiar person replaced by identical imposter | 6–36 |
| Phantom boarder syndrome | Misidentification | Phantom residents inhabit patient home | 20–30 |
| Mirror sign | Misidentification | Misidentifies mirror image | 3 |
| TV sign | Misidentification | Misidentifies television image as real | 7–8 |
| Nurturing syndrome | Misidentification | Deceased family members still living | No range reported |