A Bird’s-Eye Perspective: An Unusual Case of Very Late-Onset Schizophrenia-Like Psychosis With Visual Hallucinations Included in Its Manifestations Versus the Dementia Prodrome
Apurva Bezalwar, Pradeep S Patil, Ishaan Gautam, Namita Sahu

TL;DR
The paper presents a case of very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis with visual hallucinations and discusses its distinction from dementia.
Contribution
The study highlights a rare case of VLOSLP and emphasizes the need for specific biomarkers to differentiate it from dementia.
Findings
The patient exhibited delusions and hallucinations without negative symptoms, consistent with VLOSLP.
Neuroimaging showed white matter changes suggesting cerebrovascular involvement in VLOSLP.
The case underscores the importance of distinguishing VLOSLP from dementia with psychosis.
Abstract
Very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis (VLOSLP) is still a paradox; certain characteristics such as episodic progression of psychosis including delusions and hallucinations involving various modalities, as well as the absence of negative symptoms, are strongly predictive of VLOSLP. We describe an interesting case of a 61-year-old male who presented with a second episode of psychosis along with mild to moderate cognitive impairment like having difficulty in buttoning for over eight months at our tertiary care hospital. Previously, during the first episode, he was treated by a private practitioner; adequate doses for an adequate duration of two atypical antipsychotics were given; and up to 25% global improvement was reported by the caregiver. During the current episode, he experienced delusions, in which he had a conviction that a "WIFI" was capable of "thought-making" functions.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSchizophrenia research and treatment · Neurology and Historical Studies · Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders
