LSD-associated "Alice in Wonderland Syndrome"(AIWS): A Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (HPPD) Case Report.

IF 0.5 4区 医学 Q4 PSYCHIATRY Israel Journal of Psychiatry and Related Sciences Pub Date : 2015-01-01
Arturo G Lerner, Shaul Lev-Ran
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A side effect associated with the use of LSD is the return of perceptual disturbances which anteriorly emerged during intoxication, despite absence of present use. Here we present the case of a patient with a previous history of sporadic and recreational cannabis, alcohol and LSD consumption who reported LSD associated "Alice in Wonderland Syndrome" (AIWS) or Todd's syndrome. AIWS is basically characterized by four frequent visual illusions: macropsia, micropsia, pelopsia and teleopsia. AIWS only appeared during LSD consumption and continued after LSD suspension, namely, Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (HPPD). This phenomenon did not cause a major functional impairment but provoked sufficient worry and concern due to its persistent continuation. The patient refused medical treatment and continued psychiatric follow-up. At the one year follow-up he reported complete remission. To the best of our knowledge this is the first reported case of AIWS which persist after LSD interruption (HPPD) in the professional literature. Reasons for this intriguing, benign, reversible and apparently harmless side effect are proposed.

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lsd相关的“爱丽丝梦游仙境综合症”(AIWS):一个致幻剂持续感知障碍(HPPD)病例报告。
与使用LSD相关的副作用是,尽管目前没有使用,但先前在中毒期间出现的知觉障碍的恢复。在这里,我们提出了一个病例,患者有散发性和娱乐性大麻,酒精和LSD消费史,报告LSD相关的“爱丽丝梦游仙境综合征”(AIWS)或托德综合征。AIWS的基本特征是四种常见的视错觉:大视失视、小视失视、远视和远视失视。AIWS仅在服用LSD期间出现,并在停药后持续,即幻原持续性知觉障碍(HPPD)。这一现象并未造成重大的功能损害,但由于其持续存在,引起了足够的担忧和关注。患者拒绝接受药物治疗,并继续进行精神病学随访。在一年的随访中,他报告完全缓解。据我们所知,这是专业文献中第一例在LSD中断(HPPD)后持续存在的AIWS病例。提出了这种有趣的、良性的、可逆的、似乎无害的副作用的原因。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
25.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: THE ISRAEL JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY publishes original articles dealing with the all bio-psycho-social aspects of psychiatry. While traditionally the journal has published manuscripts relating to mobility, relocation, acculturation, ethnicity, stress situations in war and peace, victimology and mental health in developing countries, papers addressing all aspects of the psychiatry including neuroscience, biological psychiatry, psychopharmacology, psychotherapy and ethics are welcome. The Editor also welcomes pertinent book reviews and correspondence. Preference is given to research reports of no more than 5,000 words not including abstract, text, references, tables and figures. There should be no more than 40 references and 4 tables or figures. Brief reports (1,500 words, 5 references) are considered if they have heuristic value. Books to be considered for review should be sent to the editorial office. Selected book reviews are invited by the editor.
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