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Late-life paranoia: Possible association with early trauma and infertility

โœ Scribed by Bennett S. Gurian; Debra Wexler; Errol H. Baker


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
737 KB
Volume
7
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

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โœฆ Synopsis


We have collected data on 39 persons with late-life onset of paranoid symptoms, all but two of whom are women. We identified a subset of nine patients that met the criteria for delusional disorder. This group differed significantly from both demented and long-term schizophrenic patients on a number of variables. There was only one live birth among these nine women; more than half were refugees or holocaust survivors; there was an absence of a predicted sensory loss; and the manifestation of the paranoia was qualitatively different. Several issues are discussed: there is a late-life delusional state that is neither schizophrenia nor dementia; the paranoia in these delusionally disordered patients cannot be accounted for exclusively by the social isolation hypothesis; there is an interaction among early trauma, the absence of children, and the appearance of paranoid ideation late in life.

KEY woms-Aged, paranoia, dementia, women, delusional disorder, post-trauma stress.


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