Abstract
ObjectivesDelusional parasitosis is a syndrome which is more familiar to dermatologists or infectious diseases physicians than to psychiatrists. If the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders considers this syndrome belongs to delusional disorders, we can question about the psychopathology bases of this disease, regarding to the variety of clinical cases. Through an atypical case of a legionnaire's delusional parasistosis, we aimed to show that this syndrome still have blurred borders because it polymorphism can fit in many diagnoses. PatientA 36-year-old legionnaire consulted a physiatrist for a back pain and self-incised his abdomen to show to the physician he was infested by parasites. The lake of evidences to prove his infestation lead to an hospitalization in our psychiatry department. ResultsAccording to a modern classification like the DSM IV-TR, on one hand our patient's symptoms meet the criteria for the diagnosis of hypochondry, pain disorder, somatic type of delusional disorder, undifferentiated schizophrenia, mixed state, histrionic personality and narcissistic personality. On the other hand, according to a recognized French classification like Guelfi's, these symptoms evoke diagnosis of pathomimesis, hypocondry or hysteria, but they cannot completely correspond to any detailed description. ConclusionThis clinical case shows delusional parasitosis can quote for many diagnosis in modern classification (axis I and II in the DSM IV-TR) but can not completely fufill any diagnosis in Guelfi's one. Could it be a new face of hysteria?
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