Neuropsychologic implications in erotomania: two case studies.

Neuropsychiatry Neuropsychol Behav Neurol

Department of Neuropsychology, Hawaii State Hospital, Kaneohe 96744, USA.

Published: April 1999

Objective: To explore neuroanatomic substrates and cognitive factors associated with erotomania through neuropsychologic test data and neurologic studies.

Background: Erotomania is a delusional disorder that has been examined and conceptualized both clinically and psychodynamically. It is believed that neuroanatomic and neuropsychologic correlates can provide important insights into the causes of erotomania.

Method: Two patients with erotomania and the results of their neuropsychologic testing were examined, and neurologic studies also were examined for one of the patients. These data were compared with case studies from the literature.

Results: Neuropsychologic test results suggested that erotomania may be associated with deficits in cognitive flexibility and associative learning that are mediated by frontal-subcortical systems, and with deficits in verbal and visuospatial skills. Neurologic studies suggested abnormalities in temporal areas.

Conclusions: Visuospatial-functioning deficits or limbic lesions, particularly in the temporal lobes, in combination with isolative and ambivalent romantic experiences, may contribute to misinterpretations in erotomania, and deficits in cognitive flexibility may contribute to the maintenance of the delusional belief.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

case studies
8
erotomania neuropsychologic
8
neuropsychologic test
8
neurologic studies
8
deficits cognitive
8
cognitive flexibility
8
erotomania
6
neuropsychologic
5
neuropsychologic implications
4
implications erotomania
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!