Successful Pharmacologic Treatment of Self-Bloodletting with Factitious Chronic Anemia (Lasthénie de Ferjol Syndrome) with High-Dose Serotonergic Medication: A Case Report
Stefan Mestermann, Laura Rudtke, Razvan-Marius Brazdis, Thanos Tsaktanis, Johannes Kornhuber, Norbert Thürauf

TL;DR
A rare case shows that high-dose serotonergic medications can effectively treat self-bloodletting and related anemia in a psychiatric patient.
Contribution
This case report suggests high-dose clomipramine or escitalopram may be effective in treating self-bloodletting and Lasthénie de Ferjol syndrome.
Findings
High-dose clomipramine reduced self-bloodletting and suicidal thoughts in a patient with Lasthénie de Ferjol syndrome.
Escitalopram also effectively decreased and stopped the patient's self-bloodletting urges after clomipramine was discontinued.
Serotonergic antidepressants may be crucial in treating this rare psychiatric condition.
Abstract
Self-induced bloodletting (SBL) is a very rare form of self-injury (SI) seen primarily in adolescents and young adults with personality and eating disorders. It can result in complications like malaise, fatigue, or iron-deficiency anemia (Lasthénie de Ferjol syndrome, LFS), and poses a risk of accidental death or suicide. The condition often goes undetected due to patient concealment. There is no specific treatment established, and pharmacological strategies remain uncertain. We discuss the case of a 22-year-old female patient treated at our Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Department following a suicide attempt via SBL. She self-administered a venous cannula, losing 1.5 L of blood. Diagnosed with iron-deficiency anemia (LFS), she was initially treated with mirtazapine, risperidone, lithium, and later off-label high-dose clomipramine (300 mg/d). Clomipramine significantly reduced her SBL…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuicide and Self-Harm Studies · Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments · Botulinum Toxin and Related Neurological Disorders
