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L'Encephale 2008-Sep

[Recurrent pseudocyesis with polydipsia: a case report].

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B El Ouazzani
Y El Hamaoui
N Idrissi-Khamlichi
D Moussaoui

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Pseudocyesis is an imaginary pregnancy resulting from a strong desire or need for motherhood. Pseudocyesis has become increasingly rare in many parts of the world in which accurate pregnancy tests have become widely available. Cultures that place high value on pregnancy, or that make close associations between fertility and a person's worth, still have high rates of the disorder. A woman may believe in her pregnancy to the point of delusion and show acute depression when no baby is born.

METHODS

This report describes a case of recurrent pseudocyesis and polydipsia in a 49-year-old woman. She was an illiterate housewife who had been married since she was 21 years old. Four years later, she divorced because of a problem of sterility. She got remarried, five years later, and the couple had no child. The patient was admitted into the Obstetric Unit thinking that she was about to give birth. She presented all the symptoms of true pregnancy. She had abdominal distension, amenorrhea, mammary tension, nausea and vomiting, and weight gain. She claimed to have felt foetal movements. Other than this, she exhibited a polydipsia syndrome. These symptoms had evolved over 20 months. The patient had previously presented six similar episodes. All these episodes were identical. The length of these episodes varied between three and five months, after which all the signs disappeared progressively. The patient had never consulted for these symptoms before the present episode. During her stay in the Obstetric Unit, she benefited from a complete gynaecological examination, including pelvic ultrasound examinations, and laboratory tests, notably hormone assays (FSH, LH, prolactin, ss-HCG) and serum electrolyte levels. A primary sterility and menopause were confirmed. Otherwise, the psychiatric assessment confirmed the delusion of pregnancy and the presence of a depressive syndrome. The patient reported that she was possessed. She explained the normality of the imagery and laboratory tests by the intervention of the demons that hid the foetus and modified the results.

CONCLUSIONS

The contribution of psychological and physiological factors in the development of the delusion of pregnancy, possession and polydipsia, and the possible interactions between the two phenomena are discussed.

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