爱丽丝梦游仙境综合症。

Q3 Medicine
Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience Pub Date : 2018-01-01 Epub Date: 2017-11-17 DOI:10.1159/000475722
Douglas J Lanska, John R Lanska
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引用次数: 10

摘要

1955年,英国精神病学家约翰·托德将“爱丽丝梦游仙境综合症”定义为自我体验的阵发性身体形象幻觉,包括患者自身身体的大小、质量或形状或空间位置的扭曲,通常伴有人格解体和/或现实感丧失。1952年,美国神经学家卡罗·李普曼(Caro Lippman)对AIWS进行了描述,但托德的报告最具影响力。托德将这种综合症命名为刘易斯·卡罗尔(查尔斯·卢特里奇·道奇森饰)在《爱丽丝梦游仙境》(1865年)中主人公身体形象改变的感知障碍。在卡罗尔最初的故事中,爱丽丝在身体大小和形状上经历了几次戏剧性的变化(例如,身高缩小到10英寸,长得不自然地高但没有变宽,长得不自然地大)。托德报告了6例AIWS,他们都有偶发性的身体形象扭曲,就像刘易斯·卡罗尔笔下的爱丽丝所经历的那样;有些人也有视觉知觉障碍,但没有人有视觉知觉障碍而没有身体形象扭曲。因此,AIWS可能伴有视觉知觉障碍(例如,小视障碍、大视障碍、远视障碍、远视障碍),但将AIWS的诊断建立在孤立的视觉知觉障碍上,正如随后许多作者所做的那样,是不准确和误导性的。没有自我感知到身体大小、形状或形态扭曲的孤立视错觉病例,不符合托德最初的标准,也不符合《爱丽丝梦游仙境》中主人公的经历。此外,这些病例因年龄和病因而异,与那些涉及躯体知觉障碍的病例不同。因此,使用术语AIWS孤立的视错觉是有问题的,应该被劝阻。虽然Todd和Lippman的病例是青少年或成年人,但AIWS最常见于儿童。报告的病因包括感染(尤其是爱泼斯坦·巴尔病毒)、偏头痛、癫痫、抑郁、中毒性和发热性谵妄。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Alice-in-Wonderland Syndrome.

In 1955, English psychiatrist John Todd defined the Alice-in-Wonderland syndrome (AIWS) as self-experienced paroxysmal body-image illusions involving distortions of the size, mass, or shape of the patient's own body or its position in space, often accompanied by depersonalization and/or derealization. AIWS had been described by American Neurologist Caro Lippman in 1952, but Todd's report was the most influential. Todd named the syndrome for the perceptual disorder of altered body image experienced by the protagonist in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) by Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson). In Carroll's original story, Alice experienced several dramatic changes in body size and shape (e.g., shrinking to 10 inches high, growing unnaturally tall but not any wider, and growing unnaturally large). Todd reported 6 cases of AIWS, all of whom had episodic body-image distortions like those experienced by Lewis Carroll's Alice character; some also had visual perceptual disturbances, but none had visual perceptual disorders without body-image distortions. Therefore, AIWS may be accompanied by visual perceptual disorders (e.g., micropsia, macropsia, telopsia, pelopsia), but basing the diagnosis of AIWS on isolated visual perceptual disorders, as has subsequently been done by a number of authors, is inaccurate and misleading. Cases of isolated visual illusions without self-perceived distortions of body size, shape, or form, do not meet Todd's original criteria, nor are they commensurate with the experiences of the protagonist in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Furthermore, such cases differ by age and etiology from those that involve somesthetic perceptual disorders. Therefore, the use of the term AIWS for isolated visual illusions is problematic and should be discouraged. Although Todd's and Lippman's cases were adolescents or adults, AIWS is most commonly reported in children. Reported causes include infection (especially with Epstein Barr virus), migraine, epilepsy, depression, and toxic and febrile delirium.

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Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
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期刊介绍: Focusing on topics in the fields of both Neurosciences and Neurology, this series provides current and unique information in basic and clinical advances on the nervous system and its disorders.
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