| Literature DB >> 31187009 |
Blayne Knapp1, Emmanuel Tito2, Eduardo D Espiridion3.
Abstract
Alcohol-induced psychotic disorder is a rare complication of chronic alcohol abuse following abrupt alcohol cessation that is characterized by visual, auditory, or tactile hallucinations paired with intact orientation and stable vital signs, distinguishing the condition from delirium tremens and psychotic disorders. The condition, first termed alcoholic hallucinosis, has been described in medical literature for over a century, however, its nosologic classification and psychopathologic characteristics are less well-documented. One such case of alcohol-induced psychotic disorder with multimodal hallucinations of four months duration is described here.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol; alcohol induced psychotic disorder; alcoholic hallucinosis; delusion; delusional parasitosis; hallucination; psychosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31187009 PMCID: PMC6541158 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.4344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Illustrative imaging of the head
Saggital X-ray (A) demonstrates intact skull line (arrow), indicating no gross deformity or sign of trauma. Axial non-contrast computed tomography of the head (B) indicates appropriate size of lateral ventricles (arrow), no midline shift, or masses with appropriate parenchymal symmetry, and (C) demonstrates no pathology or space-occupying lesions in the brainstem or structures within the foramen magnum (arrow). These findings make an organic or pathologic cause of psychosis less likely.