AI Article Synopsis

  • Othello syndrome is a type of psychosis where individuals wrongly believe their partner is cheating, often tied to psychiatric or neurological issues, including strokes.
  • A case study details a 50-year-old woman with no prior psychiatric history who developed these delusions after a bi-thalamic stroke, resulting in severe aggressive behavior.
  • The condition underscores the link between strokes and psychiatric symptoms, particularly in the right hemisphere, which can disrupt emotional regulation and lead to dangerous misunderstandings of a partner’s behavior.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Othello syndrome is a psychosis with delusions of infidelity, where the patient harbors a persistent, unfounded belief - a "delusion" - that their partner is being unfaithful. This condition can manifest in certain psychiatric conditions and neurological disorders, such as neurodegenerative diseases, as parkinson's disease treatment side effects, or occasionally after a stroke.

Case: We report a rare case of a 50-year-old woman, with no previous psychiatric history, who developed a delusion of infidelity, leading to verbal and physical aggressions with bladed weapons, days after experiencing a bi-thalamic infarct due to the occlusion of the Percheron artery.

Discussion: Psychosis is the third most common psychiatric symptom post-stroke, with delusional disorders being the most prevalent type. Within this category, delusional jealousy is the second most common subtype, following persecutory delusions. Although no specific brain lesions are exclusively responsible for jealousy delusions, lesions in various regions, particularly in the right hemisphere, have been implicated. Thalamic strokes disrupt the frontal-subcortical-thalamic circuitry, crucial for executive functions, and the dorsomedial nuclei, leading to alterations in limbic circuitry and emotional regulation. These damages can result in significant impairments in impulse control and judgment, manifesting as behavioral disorders due to a flawed interpretation of a partner's actions as infidelity. In this case, our patient experienced a bi-thalamic infarct predominantly on the right side.

Conclusion: Othello syndrome represents a challenging post-stroke complication, highlighting the intricate relationship between neurological damage and psychiatric manifestations. Recognizing and promptly addressing this syndrome is crucial, given its potential for dangerous outcomes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13554794.2024.2436159DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Othello syndrome is a type of psychosis where individuals wrongly believe their partner is cheating, often tied to psychiatric or neurological issues, including strokes.
  • A case study details a 50-year-old woman with no prior psychiatric history who developed these delusions after a bi-thalamic stroke, resulting in severe aggressive behavior.
  • The condition underscores the link between strokes and psychiatric symptoms, particularly in the right hemisphere, which can disrupt emotional regulation and lead to dangerous misunderstandings of a partner’s behavior.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The rise in alcohol addiction is linked to modern stress, accessibility to substances, and its serious consequences, such as brain damage leading to Othello syndrome, a form of delusional disorder characterized by unfounded beliefs of a partner's infidelity.
  • - Othello syndrome, often resulting from chronic alcohol use, can lead to aggressive behavior towards partners and oneself, posing risks of violence or self-harm.
  • - Treatments include antipsychotic medications, serotonin reuptake inhibitors, and promising research on oxytocin, along with therapy for alcohol addiction and underlying mental health issues to manage this dangerous condition.
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Othello syndrome: A case report and literature review.

Encephale

February 2024

Psychiatry "A" Department, Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Faculty of Medicine of Sfax, University of Sfax, Sfax 3020, Tunisia.

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Background: Othello syndrome (OS) is a condition characterized by a delusion of jealousy that one's spouse is having extramarital affairs. As in the eponymous Shakespearean tragedy, there is an unfortunate risk of violence. For patients with these symptoms, consultation-liaison psychiatrists may be asked to assist with evaluating the differential diagnosis, assessing safety, and developing treatment options.

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Although delusions in Parkinson's disease (PD) are rare, when they occur they frequently take the form of "Othello syndrome": the irrational belief that a spouse or partner is being unfaithful. Hitherto dismissed as either a by-product of dopamine therapy or cognitive impairment, there are still no convincing theoretical accounts to explain why only some patients fall prey to this delusion, or why it persists despite clear disconfirmatory evidence. We discuss the limitations of existing explanations of this delusion, namely hyperdopaminergia-induced anomalous perceptual experiences and cognitive impairment, before describing how Bayesian predictive processing accounts can provide a more comprehensive explanation by foregrounding the importance of prior experience and its impact upon computation of probability.

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