Atypical psychosis in a patient with intracranial hypertension: clinical case and review
B. Lázaro Alonso

TL;DR
A young woman with intracranial hypertension showed atypical psychosis symptoms that resolved after treating the condition, without needing antipsychotic drugs.
Contribution
Demonstrates that intracranial hypertension can cause psychosis-like symptoms, which may resolve with appropriate treatment.
Findings
Psychosis-like symptoms in the patient resolved after reducing intracranial pressure.
No antipsychotic medication was needed for symptom remission.
Literature review supports a link between intracranial hypertension and psychotic symptoms.
Abstract
Several neurologic conditions can produce or mimic psychotic symptoms. It is important to make an exhaustive differential diagnosis between a psychiatric manifestation of an underlying neurological condition and a primary psychiatric one. We explore through the present clinical case of a young woman admitted to neurology the relationship between intracranial hypertension and a case of atypical psychosis that resolved itself with the treatment of the intracranial hypertension, without the need for antipsychotic medication. To explore through the presented clinical case and the concerning literature the concept and management of psychotic-like symptoms in patients with intracranial hypertension. We present a clinical case and a review of the existing literature concerning atypical psychosis or psychosis-like symptoms in cases of intracranial hypertension. We report the case of a 24…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis
