| Literature DB >> 22810994 |
Abstract
Shared psychotic disorder (SPD) is perceived as a relatively rare and poorly understood psychiatric phenomenon. Patients sharing sexual delusions may refer to sex therapists looking for treatment of an alleged sexual pathology. This might cause significant diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. The aim of this article was to discuss diagnostic and management difficulties of SPD with special interest in patients sharing sexual delusions. PubMed selective search was provided for publications with keywords including SPD, induced delusional disorder, folie à deux, and induced psychosis. One case is presented and discussed according to recent diagnostic criteria and the medical and legal issues of the therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22810994 PMCID: PMC3501166 DOI: 10.1007/s10508-012-9992-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Sex Behav ISSN: 0004-0002
Diagnostic criteria for Folie à deux-Induced Delusional Disorder in ICD-10 (World Health Organization, 1994) and Shared Psychotic Disorder in DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association, 2000)
| ICD-10 | DSM-IV-TR |
|---|---|
| Induced delusional disorder | Shared psychotic disorder |
| A. A subject must develop a delusion or delusional system originally held by someone else with a disorder classified in F2–F23 | A. Delusion develops in an individual in the context of a close relationship with another person(s), who has an already-established delusion |
| B. The two people must have an unusually close relationship with one another, and be relatively isolated from other people | B. The delusion is similar in content to that of the person who already has the established delusion |
| C. The subject must not have held the belief in question prior to contact with the other person, and must not have suffered from any other disorder classified in F20–F23 in the past | C. The disturbance is not better accounted for by another psychotic disorder (e.g., schizophrenia) or a mood disorder with psychotic features and is not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication) or a general medical condition |
Classification of Shared Psychotic Disorder by Gralnick (1942)
| Subtype of SPD | Description |
|---|---|
| A (folie imposée) | The dominant person with delusions imposes his or her delusions on a younger and more submissive person. Both persons are intimately associated, and the delusions of the recipient disappear after separation |
| B (folie simultanée) | The simultaneous appearance of an identical psychosis occurs in two intimately associated and morbidly predisposed individuals |
| C (folie communiguée) | The recipient develops psychosis after a long period of resistance and maintains the symptoms even after separation |
| D (folie induite) | New delusions are adopted by an individual with psychosis who is under the influence of another individual with psychosis |