| Literature DB >> 35370805 |
Daiki Ishimaru1,2, Hideki Kanemoto2, Maki Hotta2, Yuma Nagata2, Yuto Satake2, Daiki Taomoto2, Manabu Ikeda2.
Abstract
Background: The occurrence of behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia is affected by individualized context. However, details regarding delusion of theft have been poorly documented. This report describes a useful assessment to understand the environmental context of delusion through two cases of Alzheimer's disease (AD).Familial interview was conducted to assess the phenomenological features. Photos of patients' homes were used to increase the assessment accuracy and check the individualized environmental contexts; this is known as Photo Assessment of Living Environment (PA-LE). Case Description: Case 1 was of an 88-year-old woman whose Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score was 23/30. She believed that one neighbor stole her wallet and stored it on a shelf in the living room. She sometimes placed it in other places, such as under the bed as safekeeping. The delusion often occurred when getting ready to go shopping. PA-LE confirmed that the room and shelf were not cluttered, although the incorrect storage place seemed to be hard-to-find.Case 2 was of a 78-year-old woman. The MMSE score was 20/30. She believed that some neighbors stole her garden items. The delusion was limited to her garden, yet the items were varied. Auditory hallucinations exacerbated her belief that the neighbors intruded the garden. PA-LE confirmed that the garden was cluttered with several duplicated items. Moreover, the patient inaccurately remembered the condition of the garden.Non-pharmacological approaches were tailored to the patients' environmental and psychological states, referring to the interview and PA-LE. This included environmental adjustment or increasing self-esteem. Antipsychotics were also prescribed. Environmental and psychological triggers of delusion were improved by the interventions, and the patients had uneventful courses without active delusions.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; assessment; case report; delusion of theft; environmental factor
Year: 2022 PMID: 35370805 PMCID: PMC8968168 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.825710
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Delusion features assessed using interviews and photographs.
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| Age (years) | 88 | 79 |
| Sex | Female | Female |
| Diagnosis | AD | AD |
| Duration of delusion (years) | 4 | 1 |
| MMSE | 23/30 | 20/30 |
| Living arrangement | Alone | With daughter and granddaughter |
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| Frequency | Unknown | Almost daily |
| Who stole | One specific neighbor | Some neighbors |
| What was stolen | Wallet and passbook | Various garden items |
| Where the delusion occurred | Living room | Garden |
| When the delusion occurred | Unspecified | Midnight |
| Why the patient thought that their objects are stolen | Inability to find the wallet before going shopping | Hearing digging sounds and footsteps in the middle of the night |
| How the patient dealt with the theft | Complaints to the neighbor, police notification, surveillance cameras installed, and specific windows were blockaded | Neighbor notification, police notification, surveillance cameras installed, and garden fences were added |
Alzheimer's disease.
Mini-Mental State Examination.
The content and background of non-pharmacological intervention.
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Figure 1Case 1 images. (A) Brain magnetic resonance T1-weighted image showed diffuse cortical atrophy but relative sparing of the medial temporal lobes with bilateral hippocampal sulcus remnant. (B) Florbetapir 18 positron emission tomography showing positive results. (C,D) These are the images of the patient's home. She usually stored her valuables such as wallet in yellow arrowed shelf (C). She sometimes hid her valuables under the yellow arrowed bed (D). We proposed to her family that they put her valuables back to usually stored place if they found them in unusual places.
Figure 2Case 2 images. (A) Brain magnetic resonance T1-weighted image showed bilateral hippocampal atrophy. (B) Florbetapir positron emission tomogrpahy showing positive results. (C,D) These images show the patient's cluttered garden. The yellow circled items were the examples of things she has not been used in a while. The yellow arrowed ones were the examples of duplicated items. We proposed to her family that they reduced these items after consulting with her (C). The red circled storage was one of the several storage places of her garden items. We proposed to her and the family that they limitedly stored the garden items in just this place (D).