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Grandiose delusions

Grandiose delusions (GDs), also known as delusions of grandeur or expansive delusions,[1] are a subtype of delusion characterized by extraordinary belief that one is famous, omnipotent, wealthy, or otherwise very powerful. Grandiose delusions often have a religious, science fictional, or supernatural theme. Examples include the extraordinary belief that one is a deity or celebrity, or that one possesses extraordinary talents, accomplishments, or superpowers.[2]

Grandiose delusions
Other namesExpansive delusions, delusions of grandeur
People with grandiose delusions wrongly hold themselves at an extraordinarily high status in their mind.
SpecialtyPsychiatry

While non-delusional grandiose beliefs are somewhat common—occurring in at least 10% of the general population[3][vague]—and often[vague] positively influence a person's self-esteem, in some cases they may cause a person distress, in which case such beliefs may be clinically evaluated and diagnosed as a psychiatric disorder.

When studied as a psychiatric disorder in clinical settings, grandiose delusions have been found to commonly occur with other disorders, including in two-thirds of patients in a manic state of bipolar disorder, half of those with schizophrenia, patients[vague] with the grandiose subtype of delusional disorder, frequently[vague] as a comorbid condition in narcissistic personality disorder, and a substantial portion[vague] of those with substance abuse disorders.[3][4]

The term grandiose delusion overlaps with, but is distinct from, grandiosity. Grandiosity is an attitude of extraordinary self-regard (feelings of superiority, uniqueness, importance or invulnerability), while grandiose delusion concerns specific extraordinary factual beliefs about one's fame, wealth, powers, or religious and historical relevance.

Signs and symptoms edit

According to the DSM-IV-TR diagnostic criteria for delusional disorders, grandiose-type symptoms include exaggerated beliefs of:

  • self-worth
  • power[5]
  • knowledge
  • identity
  • exceptional relationship to a deity or famous person.[2]

For example, someone who has extraordinary beliefs about their power or authority may believe themselves to be a ruling monarch who deserves to be treated like royalty.[6] There are substantial differences in the degree of grandiosity linked with grandiose delusions in different people. Some patients believe they are God, the Queen of the United Kingdom, a president's son, a famous rock star, and some other examples. Others are not as expansive and think they are skilled athletes or great inventors.[7]

Expansive delusions may be maintained by auditory hallucinations, which advise the patient that they are significant, or confabulations, when, for example, the patient gives a thorough description of their coronation or marriage to the king. Grandiose and expansive delusions may also be part of fantastic hallucinosis in which all forms of hallucinations occur.[7]

Positive functions edit

Grandiose delusions frequently serve a very positive function by sustaining or increasing a person's self-esteem. As a result, it is essential to consider the consequences of removing the grandiose delusion on self-esteem when trying to modify the grandiose delusion in therapy.[5] In many instances of grandiosity, it is suitable to go for a fractional rather than a total modification, which permits those elements of the delusion that are central for self-esteem to be preserved. For example, a person who believes they are a senior secret service agent gains a great sense of self-esteem and purpose from this belief, thus until this sense of self-esteem can be provided from elsewhere, it is best not to attempt modification.[5]

In a case study of more than 13,000 non-clinical and almost 3,000 clinical participants, Isham et al.[8] found that the primary sources of meaning derived from grandiose delusions were:[8]

  • Confidence in the self
  • Overcoming adversity
  • The "greater good"
  • Happiness
  • Supporting loved ones
  • Positive social perception
  • Spirituality

Comorbidity edit

Schizophrenia edit

Schizophrenia is a mental disorder distinguished by a loss of contact with reality and the occurrence of psychotic behaviors, including hallucinations and delusions (unreal beliefs which endure even when there is contrary evidence).[9] Delusions may include the false and constant idea that the person is being followed or poisoned, or that the person’s thoughts are being broadcast for others to listen to. Delusions in schizophrenia often develop as a response to the individual attempting to explain their hallucinations.[9] Patients who experience recurrent auditory hallucinations can develop the delusion that other people are scheming against them and are dishonest when they say they do not hear the voices that the delusional person believes that he or she hears.[9]

Specifically, grandiose delusions are frequently found in paranoid schizophrenia, in which a person has an extremely exaggerated sense of their significance, personality, knowledge, or authority. For example, the person may declare to own a major corporation and kindly offer to write a hospital staff member a check for $5 million if only help them escape from the hospital.[10] Other common grandiose delusions in schizophrenia include religious delusions such as the belief that one is Jesus Christ,[11] or the Mahdi of End time in Muslim societies.[12]

Bipolar disorder edit

Bipolar 1 disorder can lead to severe affective dysregulation, or mood states that sway from exceedingly low (depression) to exceptionally high (mania).[13] In hypomania or mania, some bipolar patients can have grandiose delusions. In its most severe manifestation, days without sleep, auditory and other hallucinations, or uncontrollable racing thoughts can reinforce these delusions. In mania, this illness affects emotions and can also lead to impulsivity and disorganized thinking, which can be harnessed to increase their sense of grandiosity. Protecting this delusion can also lead to extreme irritability, paranoia, and fear. Sometimes their anxiety can be so over-blown that they believe others are jealous of them and, thus, undermine their "extraordinary abilities," persecuting them or even scheming to seize what they already have.[14]

The vast majority of bipolar patients rarely experience delusions. Typically, when experiencing or displaying a stage of heightened excitability called mania, they can experience joy, rage, and other intense emotions that can cycle out of control, along with thoughts or beliefs that are grandiose. Some of these grandiose thoughts can be expressed as strong beliefs that the patient is very rich or famous or has super-human abilities, or can even lead to severe suicidal ideations.[15] In the most severe form, in what was formerly labeled as megalomania, the bipolar patient may hear voices that support these grandiose beliefs. In their delusions, they can believe that they are, for example, a king, a creative genius, or can even exterminate the world's poverty because of their extreme generosity.[16]

Theories and mechanisms edit

Psychologists and psychiatrists have proposed multiple theoretical accounts of GDs:[17]

  • Delusion-as-defense: defense of the mind against lower self-esteem and depression.
  • Emotion-consistent: result of exaggerated positive emotions.

Empirical evidence largely supports emotion-consistent models, but also suggests additional factors like reasoning biases.[18] Grandiose delusions are usually associated with high self-esteem and self-serving attributional style and low levels of depression, anxiety and negative self-evaluation.[8][17][19][20] Moreover, there is evidence from neurotypical persons that repetitive positive self-thinking can confer temporary increases in (non-delusional) grandiose ideas of own superiority, importance or uniqueness.[21] A functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study of patients with bipolar disorder found that such thinking is associated with exaggerated connectivity between the medial prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex (brain regions involved in self-relevant information-processing).[22]

Qualitative research likewise indicates that grandiose delusions, far from occurring against a backdrop of negative self-evaluation, conferred a sense of uniqueness, purpose, and belonging, and added meaning to adverse events.[23]

The defensive hypothesis bears a strong similarity to the psychodynamic mask model of non-delusional narcissistic grandiosity,[24] which is also unsupported by the evidence.[25][26]

Neurobiology edit

Grandiose delusions may be related to lesions of the frontal lobe.[27] Temporal lobe lesions have been mainly reported in patients with delusions of persecution and of guilt, while frontal and frontotemporal involvement have been described in patients with grandiose delusions, Cotard’s syndrome, and delusional misidentification syndrome.[28]

Some studies indicate that GDs are associated with abnormalities in dopaminergic reward pathways and other limbic structures associated with reward and emotion processing.[29][30] GDs seem to be related to impaired connectivity between the left middle temporal gyrus and more dorsal regions of the left temporal lobe, regions forming a central hub of the default mode network and mediating a variety of cognitive functions (namely social and linguistic ones).[31]

Diagnosis edit

Patients with a wide range of mental disorders which disturb brain function experience different kinds of delusions, including grandiose delusions.[32] Grandiose delusions usually occur in patients with syndromes associated with secondary mania, such as Huntington's disease,[33] Parkinson's disease,[34] and Wilson's disease.[35] Secondary mania has also been caused by substances such as L-DOPA and isoniazid which modify the monoaminergic neurotransmitter function.[36] Vitamin B12 deficiency,[37] uremia,[38] hyperthyroidism[39] as well as the carcinoid syndrome[40] have been found to cause secondary mania, and thus grandiose delusions.

In diagnosing delusions, the MacArthur-Maudsley Assessment of Delusions Schedule is used to assess the patient.[41]

Treatment edit

In patients with schizophrenia, grandiose and religious delusions are found to be the least susceptible to cognitive behavioral interventions.[41] Cognitive behavioral intervention is a form of psychological therapy, initially used for depression,[42] but currently used for a variety of different mental disorders, in hope of providing relief from distress and disability.[43] During therapy, grandiose delusions were linked to patients' underlying beliefs by using inference chaining.[jargon][42][44] Some examples of interventions performed to improve the patient's state were focus on specific themes, clarification of patient's neologisms, and thought linkage.[44] During thought linkage, the patient is asked repeatedly by the therapist to explain his/her jumps in thought from one subject to a completely different one.[44]

Patients with mental disorders that experience grandiose delusions have been found to have a lower risk of having suicidal thoughts and attempts.[45]

Epidemiology edit

In a study of over 1000 individuals of a vast range of backgrounds, Stompe and colleagues (2006) found that grandiosity remains the second most common delusion after persecutory delusions.[3] The prevalence of grandiosity delusions in schizophrenic patients has also been observed to vary cross-culturally.[46][47] In research done by Appelbaum et al. it has been found that GDs appeared more commonly in patients with bipolar disorder (59%) than in patients with schizophrenia (49%), followed by presence in substance misuse disorder patients (30%) and depressed patients (21%).[48]

A relationship has been claimed[by whom?] between the age of onset of bipolar disorder and the occurrence of GDs. According to Carlson et al. (2000), grandiose delusions appeared in 74% of the patients who were 21 or younger at the time of the onset, while they occurred only in 40% of individuals 30 years or older at the time of the onset.[49]

Prevalence edit

Research suggests that the severity of the delusions of grandeur is directly related to higher self-esteem and inversely related to severity of depression and negative self-evaluations.[50] Lucas et al. found that there is no significant gender difference in the establishment of grandiose delusion.[51] However, there is a claim[by whom?] that ‘the particular content of Grandiose delusions’ may be variable across both genders.[52] Also, it has been noted[by whom?] that grandiose delusions are more prevalent in people with greater education (those with at least grammar or high school education). Similarly, the presence of grandiose delusions in individuals who are the eldest is greater than in individuals who are the youngest of their siblings.[51]

See also edit

References edit

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grandiose, delusions, delusions, grandeur, redirects, here, other, uses, delusions, grandeur, disambiguation, confused, with, grandiosity, illusory, superiority, also, known, delusions, grandeur, expansive, delusions, subtype, delusion, characterized, extraord. Delusions of grandeur redirects here For other uses see Delusions of grandeur disambiguation Not to be confused with grandiosity or illusory superiority Grandiose delusions GDs also known as delusions of grandeur or expansive delusions 1 are a subtype of delusion characterized by extraordinary belief that one is famous omnipotent wealthy or otherwise very powerful Grandiose delusions often have a religious science fictional or supernatural theme Examples include the extraordinary belief that one is a deity or celebrity or that one possesses extraordinary talents accomplishments or superpowers 2 Grandiose delusionsOther namesExpansive delusions delusions of grandeurPeople with grandiose delusions wrongly hold themselves at an extraordinarily high status in their mind SpecialtyPsychiatryWhile non delusional grandiose beliefs are somewhat common occurring in at least 10 of the general population 3 vague and often vague positively influence a person s self esteem in some cases they may cause a person distress in which case such beliefs may be clinically evaluated and diagnosed as a psychiatric disorder When studied as a psychiatric disorder in clinical settings grandiose delusions have been found to commonly occur with other disorders including in two thirds of patients in a manic state of bipolar disorder half of those with schizophrenia patients vague with the grandiose subtype of delusional disorder frequently vague as a comorbid condition in narcissistic personality disorder and a substantial portion vague of those with substance abuse disorders 3 4 The term grandiose delusion overlaps with but is distinct from grandiosity Grandiosity is an attitude of extraordinary self regard feelings of superiority uniqueness importance or invulnerability while grandiose delusion concerns specific extraordinary factual beliefs about one s fame wealth powers or religious and historical relevance Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 1 1 Positive functions 1 2 Comorbidity 1 2 1 Schizophrenia 1 2 2 Bipolar disorder 2 Theories and mechanisms 3 Neurobiology 4 Diagnosis 5 Treatment 6 Epidemiology 6 1 Prevalence 7 See also 8 ReferencesSigns and symptoms editAccording to the DSM IV TR diagnostic criteria for delusional disorders grandiose type symptoms include exaggerated beliefs of self worth power 5 knowledge identity exceptional relationship to a deity or famous person 2 For example someone who has extraordinary beliefs about their power or authority may believe themselves to be a ruling monarch who deserves to be treated like royalty 6 There are substantial differences in the degree of grandiosity linked with grandiose delusions in different people Some patients believe they are God the Queen of the United Kingdom a president s son a famous rock star and some other examples Others are not as expansive and think they are skilled athletes or great inventors 7 Expansive delusions may be maintained by auditory hallucinations which advise the patient that they are significant or confabulations when for example the patient gives a thorough description of their coronation or marriage to the king Grandiose and expansive delusions may also be part of fantastic hallucinosis in which all forms of hallucinations occur 7 Positive functions edit Grandiose delusions frequently serve a very positive function by sustaining or increasing a person s self esteem As a result it is essential to consider the consequences of removing the grandiose delusion on self esteem when trying to modify the grandiose delusion in therapy 5 In many instances of grandiosity it is suitable to go for a fractional rather than a total modification which permits those elements of the delusion that are central for self esteem to be preserved For example a person who believes they are a senior secret service agent gains a great sense of self esteem and purpose from this belief thus until this sense of self esteem can be provided from elsewhere it is best not to attempt modification 5 In a case study of more than 13 000 non clinical and almost 3 000 clinical participants Isham et al 8 found that the primary sources of meaning derived from grandiose delusions were 8 Confidence in the self Overcoming adversity The greater good Happiness Supporting loved ones Positive social perception SpiritualityComorbidity edit Schizophrenia edit Main article Schizophrenia Schizophrenia is a mental disorder distinguished by a loss of contact with reality and the occurrence of psychotic behaviors including hallucinations and delusions unreal beliefs which endure even when there is contrary evidence 9 Delusions may include the false and constant idea that the person is being followed or poisoned or that the person s thoughts are being broadcast for others to listen to Delusions in schizophrenia often develop as a response to the individual attempting to explain their hallucinations 9 Patients who experience recurrent auditory hallucinations can develop the delusion that other people are scheming against them and are dishonest when they say they do not hear the voices that the delusional person believes that he or she hears 9 Specifically grandiose delusions are frequently found in paranoid schizophrenia in which a person has an extremely exaggerated sense of their significance personality knowledge or authority For example the person may declare to own a major corporation and kindly offer to write a hospital staff member a check for 5 million if only help them escape from the hospital 10 Other common grandiose delusions in schizophrenia include religious delusions such as the belief that one is Jesus Christ 11 or the Mahdi of End time in Muslim societies 12 Bipolar disorder edit Main article Bipolar disorder Bipolar 1 disorder can lead to severe affective dysregulation or mood states that sway from exceedingly low depression to exceptionally high mania 13 In hypomania or mania some bipolar patients can have grandiose delusions In its most severe manifestation days without sleep auditory and other hallucinations or uncontrollable racing thoughts can reinforce these delusions In mania this illness affects emotions and can also lead to impulsivity and disorganized thinking which can be harnessed to increase their sense of grandiosity Protecting this delusion can also lead to extreme irritability paranoia and fear Sometimes their anxiety can be so over blown that they believe others are jealous of them and thus undermine their extraordinary abilities persecuting them or even scheming to seize what they already have 14 The vast majority of bipolar patients rarely experience delusions Typically when experiencing or displaying a stage of heightened excitability called mania they can experience joy rage and other intense emotions that can cycle out of control along with thoughts or beliefs that are grandiose Some of these grandiose thoughts can be expressed as strong beliefs that the patient is very rich or famous or has super human abilities or can even lead to severe suicidal ideations 15 In the most severe form in what was formerly labeled as megalomania the bipolar patient may hear voices that support these grandiose beliefs In their delusions they can believe that they are for example a king a creative genius or can even exterminate the world s poverty because of their extreme generosity 16 Theories and mechanisms editPsychologists and psychiatrists have proposed multiple theoretical accounts of GDs 17 Delusion as defense defense of the mind against lower self esteem and depression Emotion consistent result of exaggerated positive emotions Empirical evidence largely supports emotion consistent models but also suggests additional factors like reasoning biases 18 Grandiose delusions are usually associated with high self esteem and self serving attributional style and low levels of depression anxiety and negative self evaluation 8 17 19 20 Moreover there is evidence from neurotypical persons that repetitive positive self thinking can confer temporary increases in non delusional grandiose ideas of own superiority importance or uniqueness 21 A functional magnetic resonance imaging fMRI study of patients with bipolar disorder found that such thinking is associated with exaggerated connectivity between the medial prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex brain regions involved in self relevant information processing 22 Qualitative research likewise indicates that grandiose delusions far from occurring against a backdrop of negative self evaluation conferred a sense of uniqueness purpose and belonging and added meaning to adverse events 23 The defensive hypothesis bears a strong similarity to the psychodynamic mask model of non delusional narcissistic grandiosity 24 which is also unsupported by the evidence 25 26 Neurobiology editGrandiose delusions may be related to lesions of the frontal lobe 27 Temporal lobe lesions have been mainly reported in patients with delusions of persecution and of guilt while frontal and frontotemporal involvement have been described in patients with grandiose delusions Cotard s syndrome and delusional misidentification syndrome 28 Some studies indicate that GDs are associated with abnormalities in dopaminergic reward pathways and other limbic structures associated with reward and emotion processing 29 30 GDs seem to be related to impaired connectivity between the left middle temporal gyrus and more dorsal regions of the left temporal lobe regions forming a central hub of the default mode network and mediating a variety of cognitive functions namely social and linguistic ones 31 Diagnosis editPatients with a wide range of mental disorders which disturb brain function experience different kinds of delusions including grandiose delusions 32 Grandiose delusions usually occur in patients with syndromes associated with secondary mania such as Huntington s disease 33 Parkinson s disease 34 and Wilson s disease 35 Secondary mania has also been caused by substances such as L DOPA and isoniazid which modify the monoaminergic neurotransmitter function 36 Vitamin B12 deficiency 37 uremia 38 hyperthyroidism 39 as well as the carcinoid syndrome 40 have been found to cause secondary mania and thus grandiose delusions In diagnosing delusions the MacArthur Maudsley Assessment of Delusions Schedule is used to assess the patient 41 Treatment editIn patients with schizophrenia grandiose and religious delusions are found to be the least susceptible to cognitive behavioral interventions 41 Cognitive behavioral intervention is a form of psychological therapy initially used for depression 42 but currently used for a variety of different mental disorders in hope of providing relief from distress and disability 43 During therapy grandiose delusions were linked to patients underlying beliefs by using inference chaining jargon 42 44 Some examples of interventions performed to improve the patient s state were focus on specific themes clarification of patient s neologisms and thought linkage 44 During thought linkage the patient is asked repeatedly by the therapist to explain his her jumps in thought from one subject to a completely different one 44 Patients with mental disorders that experience grandiose delusions have been found to have a lower risk of having suicidal thoughts and attempts 45 Epidemiology editIn a study of over 1000 individuals of a vast range of backgrounds Stompe and colleagues 2006 found that grandiosity remains the second most common delusion after persecutory delusions 3 The prevalence of grandiosity delusions in schizophrenic patients has also been observed to vary cross culturally 46 47 In research done by Appelbaum et al it has been found that GDs appeared more commonly in patients with bipolar disorder 59 than in patients with schizophrenia 49 followed by presence in substance misuse disorder patients 30 and depressed patients 21 48 A relationship has been claimed by whom between the age of onset of bipolar disorder and the occurrence of GDs According to Carlson et al 2000 grandiose delusions appeared in 74 of the patients who were 21 or younger at the time of the onset while they occurred only in 40 of individuals 30 years or older at the time of the onset 49 Prevalence edit Research suggests that the severity of the delusions of grandeur is directly related to higher self esteem and inversely related to severity of depression and negative self evaluations 50 Lucas et al found that there is no significant gender difference in the establishment of grandiose delusion 51 However there is a claim by whom that the particular content of Grandiose delusions may be variable across both genders 52 Also it has been noted by whom that grandiose delusions are more prevalent in people with greater education those with at least grammar or high school education Similarly the presence of grandiose delusions in individuals who are the eldest is greater than in individuals who are the youngest of their siblings 51 See also edit nbsp Psychiatry portal nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Grandiose delusions God complex Illusory superiority Messiah complex Organic personality disorder Persecutory delusions Put on airs Pronoia Dunning Kruger effect Haughtiness Hubris Icarus complex Overconfidence effect Self serving bias Vanity ChunibyōReferences edit Ray Corsini 2016 The Dictionary of Psychology Taylor amp Francis p 985 ISBN 978 1 317 70570 3 a b Sadock B J Sadock VA 2008 11 3 Delusional Disorder and Shared Psychotic Disorder Kaplan and Sadock s Concise Textbook of Clinical Psychiatry Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins DIAGNOSIS AND CLINICAL FEATURES Mental Status Table 11 3 1 DSM IV TR Diagnostic Criteria for Delusional Disorder p 184 ISBN 9780781787468 Grandiose type delusions of inflated worth power knowledge identity or special relationship to a deity or famous person a b c Knowles R McCarthy Jones S Rowse G 2011 Grandiose delusions A review and theoretical integration of cognitive and affective perspectives Clinical Psychology Review 31 4 684 696 doi 10 1016 j cpr 2011 02 009 PMID 21482326 cites Stompe T Karakula H Rudaleviciene P Okribelashvili N Chaudhry HR Idemudia EE et al 2006 The pathoplastic effect of culture on psychotic symptoms in schizophrenia World Cultural Psychiatry Research Review 157 163 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth edition Text Revision DSM IV TR American Psychiatric Association 2000 a b c Nelson H E 2005 Cognitive Behavioural Therapy with Delusions and Hallucinations A Practice Manual Nelson Thornes p 339 ISBN 9780748792566 Retrieved 5 August 2012 Davies J L Janosik E H 1991 Mental Health and Psychiatric Nursing A Caring Approach Boston MA Jones amp Bartlett Learning p 760 ISBN 9780867204421 a b Casey P R Brendan K 2007 Fish s Clinical Psychopathology Signs and Symptoms in Psychiatry UK RCPsych Publications p 138 ISBN 9781904671329 a b c Isham Louise Sheng Loe Bao Hicks Alice Wilson Natalie Bird Jessica C Bentall Richard P Freeman Daniel 1 October 2022 The meaning in grandiose delusions measure development and cohort studies in clinical psychosis and non clinical general population groups in the UK and Ireland The Lancet Psychiatry 9 10 792 803 doi 10 1016 S2215 0366 22 00236 X ISSN 2215 0366 PMID 36049491 S2CID 251940350 a b c Magill s Encyclopedia of Social Science Psychology California Salem Press Inc 2003 pp 718 719 Noll R 2009 The Encyclopedia of Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders New York Facts on File Inc p 122 ISBN 9780816075089 Hunsley J Mash E J 2008 A Guide to Assessment that Work Oxford University Press p 676 ISBN 9780198042457 Bernama 28 April 2016 Man who claimed to be Imam Mahdi gets 24 months jail Malaysiakini Retrieved 30 November 2022 Barlow D H 2007 Clinical Handbook of Psychological Disorders A Step by Step Treatment Manual New York Guilford p 722 ISBN 9781606237656 Kantor M 2004 Understanding Paranoia A Guide for Professionals Families and Sufferers West Port Greenwoord p 252 ISBN 9780275981525 Isaac G 2001 Bipolar Not Adhd Unrecognized Epidemic of Manic Depressive Illness in Children Lincoln Writers Club Press p 184 ISBN 9781475906493 Fieve R R 2009 Bipolar Breakthrough The Essential Guide to Going Beyond Moodswings to Harness Your Highs Escape the Cycles of Recurrent Depression and Thrive with Bipolar II Rodale p 288 ISBN 9781605296456 a b Smith N Freeman D Kuipers E 2005 Grandiose Delusions An Experimental Investigation of the Delusion as Defense Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 193 7 480 487 doi 10 1097 01 nmd 0000168235 60469 cc PMID 15985843 S2CID 22462383 Knowles Rebecca McCarthy Jones Simon Rowse Georgina 1 June 2011 Grandiose delusions A review and theoretical integration of cognitive and affective perspectives Clinical Psychology Review 31 4 684 696 doi 10 1016 j cpr 2011 02 009 ISSN 0272 7358 PMID 21482326 Garety P A Gittins M Jolley S Bebbington P Dunn G Kuipers E amp Freeman D 2013 Differences in cognitive and emotional processes between persecutory and grandiose delusions Schizophrenia bulletin 39 3 629 639 Jolley Suzanne Garety Philippa Bebbington Paul Dunn Graham Freeman Daniel Kuipers Elizabeth Fowler David Hemsley David 1 November 2006 Attributional style in psychosis The role of affect and belief type Behaviour Research and Therapy 44 11 1597 1607 doi 10 1016 j brat 2005 12 002 ISSN 0005 7967 PMID 16436270 Bortolon C amp Raffard S 2021 Pondering on how great I am Does rumination play a role in grandiose ideas Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry 70 101596 Ghaznavi S Chou T Dougherty D D amp Nierenberg A A 2023 Differential patterns of default mode network activity associated with negative and positive rumination in bipolar disorder Journal of Affective Disorders 323 607 616 Isham Louise Griffith Laura Boylan Anne Marie Hicks Alice Wilson Natalie Byrne Rory Sheaves Bryony Bentall Richard P Freeman Daniel 29 November 2019 Understanding treating and renaming grandiose delusions A qualitative study Psychology and Psychotherapy Theory Research and Practice 94 1 119 140 doi 10 1111 papt 12260 ISSN 1476 0835 PMC 7984144 PMID 31785077 Beck A T amp Rector N A 2002 Delusions A cognitive perspective Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy 16 4 455 468 Bosson J K Lakey C E Campbell W K Zeigler Hill V Jordan C H amp Kernis M H 2008 Untangling the links between narcissism and self esteem A theoretical and empirical review Social amp Personality Psychology Compass 2 1415 1439 doi 10 1111 j 1751 9004 2008 00089 x Campbell W K amp Foster J D 2007 The narcissistic self Background an extended agency model and ongoing controversies The self 115 138 Omar Rohani Sampson Elizabeth L Loy Clement T Mummery Catherine J Fox Nick C Rossor Martin N Warren Jason D April 2009 Delusions in frontotemporal lobar degeneration Journal of Neurology 256 4 600 607 doi 10 1007 s00415 009 0128 7 ISSN 0340 5354 PMC 2756566 PMID 19365594 Tonkonogy Joseph M Tonkonogiĭ TM Puente AE 2009 5 Disturbances in the Recognition of the Social World Localization of Clinical Syndromes in Neuropsychology and Neuroscience New York NY Springer Publishing Company Conclusion p 288 ISBN 9780826119681 2 Temporal lobe lesions have been primarily reported in patients with delusions of persecution and of guilt while frontal and frontotemporal involvement have described sic in patients with grandiose delusions Cotard s syndrome and delusional misidentification syndrome Bracht T Viher P V Stegmayer K Strik W Federspiel A Wiest R amp Walther S 2019 Increased structural connectivity of the medial forebrain bundle in schizophrenia spectrum disorders is associated with delusions of paranoid threat and grandiosity NeuroImage Clinical 24 102044 Stegmayer K Horn H Federspiel A Razavi N Bracht T Laimbock K amp Walther S 2014 Ventral striatum gray matter density reduction in patients with schizophrenia and psychotic emotional dysregulation NeuroImage Clinical 4 232 239 Ping L Zhou C Sun S Wang W Zheng Q amp You Z 2022 Alterations in resting state whole brain functional connectivity pattern similarity in bipolar disorder patients Brain and Behavior 12 5 e2580 Cummings Jeffrey L 1985 Organic delusions phenomenology anatomical correlations and review The British Journal of Psychiatry 146 2 184 197 doi 10 1192 bjp 146 2 184 PMID 3156653 S2CID 31949452 McHugh P R Folstein M F 1975 Psychiatric syndromes in Huntington s chorea Psychiatric Aspectes of Neurological Disease Bromberg W 1930 Mental states in chronic encephalitis Psychiatric Quarterly 4 4 537 566 doi 10 1007 bf01563408 S2CID 33819397 Pandy R S Sreenivas K N Paith N M Swamy H S 1981 Dopamine beta hydroxylase in a patient with Wilson s disease and mania The American Journal of Psychiatry 138 12 1628 1629 doi 10 1176 ajp 138 12 1628 PMID 7304799 Lin J T Y Ziegler D 1976 Psychiatric symptoms with initiation of carbidopa levodopa treatment Neurology 26 7 679 700 doi 10 1212 wnl 26 7 699 PMID 945518 S2CID 19413218 Goggans F C 1983 A case of mania secondary to vitamin B12 deficiency The American Journal of Psychiatry 141 2 300 301 doi 10 1176 ajp 141 2 300 PMID 6691503 Cooper A T 1967 Hypomanic psychosis precipitated by hemodialysis Comprehensive Psychiatry 8 3 168 172 doi 10 1016 s0010 440x 67 80020 8 PMID 6046067 Jefferson J W Marshall J R Neuropsychiatric Features of Medical Disorders New York Plenum Medical Book Company Lehmann J 1966 Mental disturbances followed by stupor in a patient with carcinoidosis Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 42 2 153 161 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0447 1966 tb01921 x PMID 5958539 S2CID 144556510 a b Appelbaum P S Clark Robbins P Roth L H 1999 Dimensional approach to delusions Comparison across types and diagnoses The American Journal of Psychiatry 156 12 1938 1943 doi 10 1176 ajp 156 12 1938 PMID 10588408 S2CID 15263352 a b Beck A T Rush A J Shaw B F Emergy G 1979 Cognitive Therapy of Depression New York NY Guilford Press Salkovskis P M 1996 Frontiers of Cognitive Therapy New York Guillford a b c Sensky T et al 2000 A randomized controlled trial of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Persistent Symptoms in Schizophrenia resistant to medication Archives of General Psychiatry 57 2 165 172 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 57 2 165 PMID 10665619 Oquendo M A et al 2000 Suicidal behavior in bipolar mood disorder clinical characteristics of attempters and nonattempters Journal of Affective Disorders 59 2 107 117 doi 10 1016 s0165 0327 99 00129 9 PMID 10837879 Stompe T et al 2007 Paranoid hallucinatory syndromes in schizophrenia results of the international study on psychotic symptoms World Cultural Psychiatry Review 63 68 Suhail K 2003 Phenomenology of delusions in Pakistani patients effect of gender and social class Psychopathology 36 4 195 199 doi 10 1159 000072789 PMID 14504453 S2CID 38400554 Knowles et al 2011 cites Appelbaum P S Clark Robbins P Roth L H 1999 Dimensional approach to delusions Comparison across types and diagnoses The American Journal of Psychiatry 156 12 1938 1943 doi 10 1176 ajp 156 12 1938 PMID 10588408 S2CID 15263352 Knowles et al 2011 cites Carlson GA Bromet EJ Sievers S 2000 Phenomenology and outcome of subjects with early and adult onset psychotic mania American Journal of Psychiatry 157 2 213 219 doi 10 1176 appi ajp 157 2 213 PMID 10671389 Smith N et al 2006 Emotion and psychosis Links between depression self esteem negative schematic beliefs and delusions and hallucinations Schizophrenia Research 86 1 181 188 doi 10 1016 j schres 2006 06 018 PMID 16857346 S2CID 31993235 a b Lucas C J et al 1962 A social and clinical study of delusions in schizophrenia The Journal of Mental Science 108 457 747 758 doi 10 1192 bjp 108 457 747 PMID 13931397 Knowles et al 2011 cites Rudaleviciene P Stompe T Narbekovas A Raskauskiene N Bunevicius R 2008 Are religious delusions related to religiosity in schizophrenia Medicina Kaunas 44 7 529 535 doi 10 3390 medicina44070068 PMID 18695349 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grandiose delusions amp 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