Exploratory Laparatomy in a Schizophrenic Patient with Parasiticide as a High Risk Behavior; Ekbom Syndrome: A Case Report

authors:

avatar Reza Bidaki 1 , 2 , * , avatar Seyed Ali Mostafavi 3 , avatar Ehsan Farhadi Shourbalaghi 4

Research Center of Addiction and Behavioral Sciences, Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd, IR Iran
Diabetes Research Center, Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd, IR Iran
Psychiatry and Psychology Research Center, Roozbeh Hospital, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR Iran
Young Researchers and Elite Club, Yazd Branch, Islamic Azad University, Yazd, IR Iran

how to cite: Bidaki R, Mostafavi S A, Farhadi Shourbalaghi E. Exploratory Laparatomy in a Schizophrenic Patient with Parasiticide as a High Risk Behavior; Ekbom Syndrome: A Case Report. Int J High Risk Behav Addict. 2016;5(4):e29815. https://doi.org/10.5812/ijhrba.29815.

Abstract

Introduction:

Delusions of parasitosis or Ekbom syndrome are a psychotic disorder that causes a patient to suffer from the substantial false belief that he or she is infested with a parasite or helminth.

Case Presentation:

The patient was a 44-year-old, unemployed divorced man with a past psychiatric history of schizophrenia. He was referred to the emergency department (ED) with a complaint of a rupture of the abdomen. He believed that a large, threatening helminth or macro parasite had entered in his abdomen and was eating and destroying his intestines, liver and other internal organs. Therefore, following these thoughts, he decided to explore his abdomen and to remove of this “vampire.”

Conclusions:

Delusional infestation or parasitosis may be detected in context and secondary to schizophrenia with nihilistic delusion and may create a high degree of suffering for patients, ultimately cause mortality, because of threatening behaviors toward the self.

1. Introduction

Delusory parasitosis, or delusional disorder / somatic type, is a psychotic disorder wherein a patient suffers from a substantial false belief that he or she is infested with a parasite (1). The symptoms appear slowly or violently. The patient may express pruritus, tactile hallucinations, or fornication (2, 3). The male-to-female occurrence ratio is 1: 1.5, and the mean age of onset is nearly 57 years (1).

Self-damage without the will to die or self-mutilation may occur in borderline personality disorder, factitious disorder, and schizophrenia. It is more prevalent in female patients (4).

2. Case Presentation

The patient was a 44-year-old white, divorced, unemployed male, with low socio-economic status and a past psychiatric history of schizophrenia. He presented to the emergency department (ED) with complaints of a loss of consciousness and rupture of his abdomen. His medical condition was serious. The surgeon repaired his abdomen and internal organs, and after three weeks, he was referred to the psychiatric ward with partial improvement for treatment of his thoughts. In previous months, he believed that a large, threatening and invisible helminth, or macro parasite, had entered his abdomen and was eating and destroying his intestines, liver, and other internal organs. He was convinced it was growing. He said that he felt it under the skin of his abdomen, but could not see it. No one believed him. Therefore, he was confused and very angry and worried. He did not try to kill it using a paracidic agent, as he believed the parasite was huge and resistant to drugs or poisons. He was not a surgeon, but decided to use a knife to create a laceration and explore the inside of his abdomen, in hopes of removing this single Vampire worm. His surgery was conducted under non-sterile conditions in his home, and he seriously hurt himself (Figure 1).

Ekbom Syndrome (Picture by Abdi)
Ekbom Syndrome (Picture by Abdi)

The patient’s medical history was negative, but psychiatric hospitalization and suicide attempts were positive in his past. A family history of psychiatric disorders was positive regarding his mother, who had depressive disorder, and his father, who was violent and depressive.

The patient’s manner was non-cooperative and unpleasant, with mild psychomotor retardation. Speech was decreased by a poverty of thoughts, and perseveration was detected. His mood was described as depressed. His thought processes were tangential and illogical and he was positive for evidence of delusions and paranoia.

He was diagnosed with delusional disorder, somatic type (known as Ekbom syndrome, or delusional parasitosis). We started one 2-mg tablet of Risperidone at bedtime for delusions of somatic type, and this was up-titrated to 4 mg at bedtime to optimally control his delusions. He also complained of depressive mood, which was first treated with a 50-mg tablet of Sertraline, and later increased to 100 mg / daily, along with 1 mg Clonazepam at night and Na-Valproate 200 mg/TDS. The hospitalization was long, due to his fixed delusions.

The patient’s routine laboratory tests were intact, and the urine drug tests were negative. Neurological examination, electro encephalography, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were intact.

After 39 days, the patient was discharged, but his symptoms were not omitted completely. He believed that the helminth was still in his abdomen. Of course, his delusions were remarkably decreased.

3. Discussion

Bouree and colleagues explain delusions of parasitosis, or Ekbom syndrome, as occurring mainly in pre-invasive senile women who are single or living alone (2). On the contrary, our case was a middle-aged divorced man. According to DSM-5, schizophrenia spectrum disorders are defined: “in one or more of the following five domains: delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thinking (speech), grossly disorganized or abnormal motor behavior (including catatonia), and negative symptoms” (5). So, according to the above signs and symptoms, the major diagnosis for this patient is schizophrenia; delusional disorder occurred in context of schizophrenia. Our case included bizarre behavior, disorganized speech (a poverty content of speech), and negative symptoms (impaired self-care, social isolation, abulia, alogia) for more than six months. His problems were not in the context of a general medical condition (GMC) or substance abuse. Therefore, the diagnosis of schizophrenia was definite. His delusion of parasitosis was one of the symptoms of this patient, in the context of a major disorder like schizophrenia.

A literature review revealed that cases such as these are reported as being only rarely life-threatening, but they are always life-altering for patients and their families (3, 4). The actions of this patient were odd, threatening bizarre, and uncommon. It was not a suicide attempt.

This man was going through a divorce and perhaps could not accept his wife's abandonment of him, so he redirected his focus to putative parasites in his internal organs. Therefore, the delusions of parasitosis may be an immature defense mechanism whereby the patient displaced or diverted the emotions with which he could not deal and substituted an infestation of obsessive thoughts (6).

The patient did not feel severe pain during his act. As some previous studies have indicated, patients with schizophrenia are not sensitive to much somatic pain associated with illness and injuries (7). Because no one agreed with him about this crisis, perhaps the patient’s self-harm was a cry for help from this patient

We also found a report from eastern Asia of a schizophrenic patient had cut his genital system because of assumed necrosis (8). Of course, the behavior of our patient was more dangerous, bizarre and adventuresome, as he believed he was fighting an aggressive and living foreign body.

Drug non-compliance, poor response to non-psychiatric treatment, and significant distress may lead to secondary depressive states. Suitable rapport, empathic, and supportive therapy and declines in the high expression of emotional conditions in a family setting are effective approaches for dealing with these patients (9, 10). Concerning this case, the level of family support was poor, and there was a high expression of emotion within his family. His judgment and sense of reality were impaired, and he did not accept his problems as indicative of a disorder.

It is an obsessive phobic state in which a person thinks, believes, or even imagines that he or she is involved with parasites. Therefore, this is an ego-dystonic condition where in the patient has a preoccupation with his or her thoughts. The laceration of the abdomen can be seen as a compulsive behavior in reply to these obsessions.

Our patient also believed that the parasite had eaten and destroyed part of his heart, stomach, intestines, and liver. Therefore, nihilistic delusion was another sign present in this schizophrenic patient.

This is a rare report about an odd and bizarre behavior in the context of delusional infestation. The condition could have caused mortality, because of the patient’s threatening behavior toward himself.

Acknowledgements

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