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Ganser syndrome

Ganser syndrome is a rare dissociative disorder characterized by nonsensical or wrong answers to questions and other dissociative symptoms such as fugue, amnesia or conversion disorder, often with visual pseudohallucinations and a decreased state of consciousness.[1] The syndrome has also been called nonsense syndrome, balderdash syndrome, syndrome of approximate answers, hysterical pseudodementia or prison psychosis.

Ganser Syndrome
SpecialtyPsychiatry

The term prison psychosis is sometimes used because the syndrome occurs most frequently in prison inmates, where it may be seen as an attempt to gain leniency from prison or court officials.[2] Psychological symptoms generally resemble the patient's sense of mental illness rather than any recognized category. The syndrome may occur in persons with other mental disorders such as schizophrenia, depressive disorders, toxic states, paresis, alcohol use disorders and factitious disorders.[3] Ganser syndrome can sometimes be diagnosed as merely malingering, but it is more often defined as dissociative disorder.[3]

The identification of Ganser syndrome is attributed to German psychiatrist Sigbert Ganser (1853–1931). In 1898, he described the disorder in prisoners awaiting trial in a penal institution in Halle, Germany. He named impaired consciousness and distorted communication, namely in the form of approximate answers (also referred to as Vorbeireden in the literature), as the defining symptoms of the syndrome.[1] Vorbeireden involves the inability to answer questions precisely, although the content of the questions is understood.[4]

Ganser syndrome is described as a dissociative disorder not otherwise specified (DDNOS) in the DSM-IV, and is not currently listed in the DSM-5. It is a rare and an often overlooked clinical phenomenon. In most cases, it is preceded by extreme stress and followed by amnesia for the period of psychosis.[4] In addition to approximate answers, other symptoms include a clouding of consciousness, somatic conversion disorder symptoms, confusion, stress, loss of personal identity, echolalia, and echopraxia.

Cause edit

To date, no definitive cause or reason of the disorder has been established.[5] The sources that classify the syndrome as a dissociative disorder[6] or a factitious disorder conflict in their proposed aetiologies. As a result, there are differing theories as to why the syndrome develops.

Ganser syndrome was previously classified as a factitious disorder, explaining the symptoms as mimicking of what patients who do not experience psychosis believe is typical of the experience.[7] However, the DSM-IV placed the syndrome under "Dissociative Disorders Not Otherwise Specified".[8] There has been evidence of a strong correlation between approximate answers and amnesia, suggesting that these have an underlying dissociative mechanism.[9]

Both Ganser's syndrome and the broader category of dissociative disorders have been linked to histories of hysteria, psychosis, conversion, multiple personality and possible feigning.[9] Despite this, the condition's aetiology remains under question due to associations with established psychiatric disorders, as well as organic states.

According to Stern and Whiles (1942), Ganser syndrome is a fundamentally psychotic illness.[1] As evidence, they describe the case of a woman with recurrent mania and a head injury before being submitted to treatment and the report of a man with schizophrenia who suffered from alcoholism and had recently been in prison.[1]

Ganser syndrome is also sometimes referred to as "prison psychosis", emphasizing its prevalence among prisoners, generating discussion about whether the disorder only appears in this population.[1] In a study of prisoners, Estes and New concluded that escaping an intolerable situation, such as being incarcerated, prompted the syndrome's key symptoms. The study touched on the malingering controversy surrounding the syndrome, as well as the stress component that often precedes the disorder.[10]

According to consultant psychiatrist F. A. Whitlock, Ganser syndrome is a hysterical disorder, on par with Ganser's description of the disorder.[1] Whitlock pointed to the number of cases in which Ganser syndrome was reported in settings of organic brain disease or functional psychosis as evidence of its hysterical foundations.[1] Kraepelin and Bumke also believed the syndrome to be of a hysterical nature.[4] Bumke thought the syndrome hysterical because amnesia for a traumatic emotional event tends to occur in hysteria more than in other disorders.[4] The giving of approximate answers is thought to be produced in hysterical personalities.[4]

According to Mayer-Gross and Bleuler, Ganser syndrome occurs mainly in epileptic or schizophrenic patients.[4]

Still others claim that an organic condition that could lead to the manifestation of Ganser syndrome symptoms would have to be at an advanced stage in which a diagnosis could be easily given.[11]

There have also been reports of trauma and stroke patients with the syndrome. A study investigating the neurological basis of Ganser syndrome described a patient with symptoms of the disorder who had a history of stroke and bifrontal infarcts.[12] They discovered that hyperglutamatergic states, which are caused by both strokes and stress, share a relationship with dissociative symptoms, suggesting a possible organic pathology that can predispose individuals to the syndrome.[12] Wirtz and colleagues (2008) described a patient with Ganser syndrome after a left-hemispheric middle cerebral artery infarct.[12] A neuropsychological examination revealed atypical lateralisation of cognitive functions, leading to the conclusion that the giving of approximate answers might be related to frontal-executive cerebral dysfunction.[12]

Diagnosis edit

Ganser syndrome was listed under Factitious Disorder with Psychological Symptoms in the DSM-III.[13] The criteria of this category emphasized symptoms that cannot be explained by other mental disorders, psychological symptoms under the control of the individual, and the goal of assuming a patient role, not otherwise understandable given their circumstances.[13]

The DSM-IV-TR classified Ganser syndrome as a dissociative disorder defined by the giving of approximate answers to questions (e.g. '2 plus 2 equals 5' when not associated with dissociative amnesia or dissociative fugue).[8] The ICD-10[6] and DSM-IV do not specify any diagnostic criteria—apart from approximate answers—as a requirement for a Ganser syndrome diagnosis.[8] Most case studies of the syndrome also depend on the presence of approximate answers and at least one of the other symptoms described by Ganser in his original paper.[4] Usually when giving wrong answers, individuals are only slightly off, showing that the individual understood the question[10] For instance, when asked how many legs a horse has, they might say, "five". Although subjects appear confused in their answers, in other respects they appear to understand their surroundings.[10] Amnesia, loss of personal identity, and clouding of consciousness were among the most common symptoms apart from approximate answers.[4]

Although there is currently no uniform way to diagnose the syndrome, a full neurological and mental state examination is recommended to determine its presence as well as tests that assess malingering.[7] In addition to mental examination, other investigations should be done to exclude other underlying causes. These include computer tomography scans (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans to exclude structural pathology, lumbar puncture to exclude meningitis or encephalitis, and electroencephalography (EEG), to exclude delirium or seizure disorder.[14]

Diagnosing Ganser syndrome is challenging because of its rarity and symptom variability. The manifested symptoms may be dependent on the individual's conception of what mental illness entails, creating the possibility of a wide range of combinations of symptoms present in an individual with Ganser syndrome.[7]

Treatment edit

In many cases, the symptoms seem to dwindle after a few days, and patients are often left with amnesia for the period of psychosis.[4] Hospitalization may be necessary during the acute phase of symptoms, and psychiatric care if the patient is a danger to self or others.[15] A neurological consult is advised to rule out any organic cause. Psychotherapy may also recommended for ensuring and maintaining safety.

Ganser patients typically recover quickly and completely.[16] Since Ganser syndrome can be a response to psychic deterioration, its resolution may be followed by other psychiatric symptoms, such as schizophrenia[17] and depression,[18] hence the rationale behind the recommendation of psychotherapy. Medication is usually not required.[15]

Epidemiology edit

Reviewing multiple collections of case studies, the incidence of the disorder is not precisely known.[14][19][20][21] Individuals of multiple backgrounds have been reported as having the disorder. The syndrome was historically thought to be more common in men. However, Whitlock[1] speculates that the higher reported rate of Ganser in men might be due to the greater proportion of men who are incarcerated.[20][22] It has been most frequently seen in individuals ages 15 to 40 and has also been observed in children.[23] This wide age range is derived from case studies, and therefore may not be an accurate estimate. Ganser syndrome has also been observed in groups other than prison populations.[1]

Controversy edit

There is controversy regarding whether Ganser syndrome is a valid clinical entity.[7] For example, Bromberg (1986) has argued that the syndrome is not due to or related to mental illness, but rather a sort of defense against legal punishment.[10] Some see it as conscious lying, denial and repression, presenting Ganser syndrome symptoms as malingering instead of a dissociative or factitious disorder.[10]

One case study of Ganser syndrome presented a middle-aged man who had been in a car crash and wanted disability insurance benefits.[24] Since he had a big incentive, psychologists took careful measures and implemented testing with malingering instruments, which showed that the man performed below chance on simple memory tests and claimed to experience non-existent symptoms.[24] Upon further inspection of the collateral information, they found that the patient took part in high-level sports and other activities that were inconsistent with the cognitive dysfunctions he reported, and they determined it to be a case of malingering.[24]

Estes and New (1948) concluded that the motivation for the symptoms of the syndrome was escaping an "intolerable situation".[10] Stern and Whiles proposed an alternative explanation, citing Ganser syndrome presented itself in individuals who, although not psychologically well, do not realize it, and want to appear so.[10] Still others attribute the syndrome to inattention, purposeful evasion, suppression, alcoholic excess, head injury, and to unconscious attempts to deceive others as a means to free themselves from responsibility for their actions.[10] This denial of behaviour can be seen as a way to overcome anxiety and helplessness brought on by the stressful event that often precedes the syndrome.[10]

These aetiological debates focus on the main symptom of Ganser syndrome and its importance in its diagnosis. Approximate answers are prominent in the Ganser syndrome literature, causing concern in those who believe that this is a relatively simple symptom to feign.[7]

Ganser syndrome was regarded as an Adjustment Reaction of Adult Life in the DSM-II and later was moved under the category of Factitious Disorder with Psychological Symptoms in the DSM-III.[13] Ganser syndrome can also be found under the Dissociative Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (DDNOS) section of the DSM-IV-TR,[8] however it is not listed in the DSM-5, which got rid of the DDNOS section and replaced it with Other Specified Dissociative Disorder (OSDD) and Unspecified Dissociative Disorder (USDD).[25] Despite this, the International Classification of Diseases has Ganser syndrome listed under dissociative disorders.[6]

Popular Media edit

In the novel, "Red Dragon" by author Thomas Harris, there is a scene where Hannibal Lector reports Dr. Chilton, chief of staff at the mental hospital where he resides, to have attributed Lector having Ganser syndrome as a reason to why he avoided prison. Chilton claims so in order to avoid embarrassment at Lector easily outsmarting him through the various tests Chilton tried to give him in order to better understand Lector. [26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Whitlock, F.A. (1967). The Ganser Syndrome. British Journal of Psychiatry, 113(494), 19-29. doi:10.1192/bjp.113.494.19
  2. ^ Renzulli, Isobel (2022-01-02). "Prison abolition: international human rights law perspectives". The International Journal of Human Rights. 26 (1): 100–121. doi:10.1080/13642987.2021.1895766. ISSN 1364-2987. S2CID 233661791.
  3. ^ a b Knoblosh, F. (1986). Ganser Syndrome and DSM-III. American Journal of Psychiatry, 143(3), 393-393.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Weiner, H.; Brainman, A. (1955). The Ganser Syndrome: A Review and Addition of Some Unusual Cases. American Journal of Psychiatry, 111(10), 767-773. doi:10.1176/ajp.111.10.767
  5. ^ Mendis, S.; Hodgson, R.E. (2012). Ganser Syndrome: examining the aetiological debate through a systematic case report review. European Journal of Psychiatry, 26(2). doi:10.4321/S0213-61632012000200003
  6. ^ a b c World Health Organization. (1992). The ICD-10 classification of mental and behavioural disorders: Clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines. Geneva: World Health Organization.
  7. ^ a b c d e Epstein, R.S. (1991). Ganser Syndrome, Trance Logic, and the Question of Malingering. Psychiatric Annals, 21(4), 238-244. doi:10.3928/0048-5713-19910401-11
  8. ^ a b c d American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 4th ed. Text rev. Washington, DC. American Psychiatric Association, 2000.
  9. ^ a b Cocores, J.A.; Santa, W.G.; Patel L, MD. (1985). The Ganser Syndrome: Evidence Suggesting its Classification as a Dissociative Disorder. The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 14(1), 47-56.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bromberg, W. (1986). The neglect of Ganser Syndrome. The American Journal of Psychiatry, 143(7), 937-938.
  11. ^ Koenig, T.; Lee, H.B. (2001). A Case of Ganser Syndrome: Organic or Hysterical?. General Hospital Psychiatry, 23(4), 230-231. doi:10.1016/S0163-8343(01)00147-5
  12. ^ a b c d Ouyang, D., Duggal, H. S., & Jacob, N. J. (2003). Neurobiological Basis of Ganser Syndrome. Indian Journal of Psychiatry, 45(4), 255–256.
  13. ^ a b c American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 3rd ed. Washington, DC. American Psychiatric Association, 1952.
  14. ^ a b Dwyer, J.; Reid, S. (2004). Ganser's Syndrome. The Lancet, 364(9432), 471-473. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(04)16772-X
  15. ^ a b Carney, M.W.P.; Chary, T.N.K.; Robotis, P.; Childs, A. (1987). Ganser Syndrome and its Management. British Journal of Psychiatry, 151, 697-700. doi:10.1192/bjp.151.5.697
  16. ^ Enoch, M. D., & Irving, G. (1962). The Ganser syndrome. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 38(3), 213-222.
  17. ^ Lieberman, A.A. (1954). The Ganser Syndrome in Psychoses. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 120(1-2), 10-16. doi:10.1097/00005053-195407000-00002
  18. ^ Haddah, P.M. (1993). Ganser Syndrome Followed by Major Depressive Episode. British Journal of Psychiatry, 161, 251-253. doi:10.1192/bjp.162.2.251
  19. ^ Sigal, Mircea; Altmark, David; Alfici, Susana; Gelkopf, Marc (1992). "Ganser syndrome: A review of 15 cases". Comprehensive Psychiatry. 33 (2): 134–138. doi:10.1016/0010-440X(92)90011-E. PMID 1544298.
  20. ^ a b Henrik Steen Andersen, Dorte Sestof (2001). "Ganser syndrome after solitary confinement in prison: A short review and a case report". Nordic Journal of Psychiatry. 55 (3): 199–201. doi:10.1080/08039480152036083. ISSN 0803-9488. PMID 11827615. S2CID 218895869.
  21. ^ Agarwal, S., Dhami, A., Dahuja, M., & Choudhary, S. (2018). Ganser syndrome in adolescent male: A rare case report. Journal of Indian Association for Child & Adolescent Mental Health, 14(1).
  22. ^ Wincewicz, Karolina; Sapota-Zaręba, Karolina; Nasierowski, Tadeusz (2022-02-27). "Ganser syndrome – a dissociative disorder or a factitious disorder? A case report". Psychiatria Polska. 56 (1): 63–75. doi:10.12740/PP/129012. ISSN 0033-2674. PMID 35569148. S2CID 247590444.
  23. ^ Miller, P.; Bramble, D.; Buxton, N. (1997). Case Study: Ganser Syndrome in Children and Adolescents. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 36(1), 112-115. doi:10.1097/00004583-199701000-00024
  24. ^ a b c Merckelbach, H.; Peters, M.; Jelicic, M.; Brands, I. and Smeets, T. (2006). Detecting malingering of Ganser‐like symptoms with tests: A case study. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 60: 636-638. doi:10.1111/j.1440-1819.2006.01571.x
  25. ^ American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Publishing
  26. ^ Harris, Thomas (October 1981). Red Dragon. Dell Publishing. ISBN 0-399-12442-X.

Further reading edit

  • Schutzman, Mady (2003). "Being Approximate: The Ganser Syndrome and Beyond" (PDF). Journal of Medical Humanities. 24 (1/2): 147–158. doi:10.1023/A:1021318118143. S2CID 141323730. Retrieved 14 December 2010.

External links edit

ganser, syndrome, rare, dissociative, disorder, characterized, nonsensical, wrong, answers, questions, other, dissociative, symptoms, such, fugue, amnesia, conversion, disorder, often, with, visual, pseudohallucinations, decreased, state, consciousness, syndro. Ganser syndrome is a rare dissociative disorder characterized by nonsensical or wrong answers to questions and other dissociative symptoms such as fugue amnesia or conversion disorder often with visual pseudohallucinations and a decreased state of consciousness 1 The syndrome has also been called nonsense syndrome balderdash syndrome syndrome of approximate answers hysterical pseudodementia or prison psychosis Ganser SyndromeSpecialtyPsychiatryThe term prison psychosis is sometimes used because the syndrome occurs most frequently in prison inmates where it may be seen as an attempt to gain leniency from prison or court officials 2 Psychological symptoms generally resemble the patient s sense of mental illness rather than any recognized category The syndrome may occur in persons with other mental disorders such as schizophrenia depressive disorders toxic states paresis alcohol use disorders and factitious disorders 3 Ganser syndrome can sometimes be diagnosed as merely malingering but it is more often defined as dissociative disorder 3 The identification of Ganser syndrome is attributed to German psychiatrist Sigbert Ganser 1853 1931 In 1898 he described the disorder in prisoners awaiting trial in a penal institution in Halle Germany He named impaired consciousness and distorted communication namely in the form of approximate answers also referred to as Vorbeireden in the literature as the defining symptoms of the syndrome 1 Vorbeireden involves the inability to answer questions precisely although the content of the questions is understood 4 Ganser syndrome is described as a dissociative disorder not otherwise specified DDNOS in the DSM IV and is not currently listed in the DSM 5 It is a rare and an often overlooked clinical phenomenon In most cases it is preceded by extreme stress and followed by amnesia for the period of psychosis 4 In addition to approximate answers other symptoms include a clouding of consciousness somatic conversion disorder symptoms confusion stress loss of personal identity echolalia and echopraxia Contents 1 Cause 2 Diagnosis 3 Treatment 4 Epidemiology 5 Controversy 6 Popular Media 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksCause editTo date no definitive cause or reason of the disorder has been established 5 The sources that classify the syndrome as a dissociative disorder 6 or a factitious disorder conflict in their proposed aetiologies As a result there are differing theories as to why the syndrome develops Ganser syndrome was previously classified as a factitious disorder explaining the symptoms as mimicking of what patients who do not experience psychosis believe is typical of the experience 7 However the DSM IV placed the syndrome under Dissociative Disorders Not Otherwise Specified 8 There has been evidence of a strong correlation between approximate answers and amnesia suggesting that these have an underlying dissociative mechanism 9 Both Ganser s syndrome and the broader category of dissociative disorders have been linked to histories of hysteria psychosis conversion multiple personality and possible feigning 9 Despite this the condition s aetiology remains under question due to associations with established psychiatric disorders as well as organic states According to Stern and Whiles 1942 Ganser syndrome is a fundamentally psychotic illness 1 As evidence they describe the case of a woman with recurrent mania and a head injury before being submitted to treatment and the report of a man with schizophrenia who suffered from alcoholism and had recently been in prison 1 Ganser syndrome is also sometimes referred to as prison psychosis emphasizing its prevalence among prisoners generating discussion about whether the disorder only appears in this population 1 In a study of prisoners Estes and New concluded that escaping an intolerable situation such as being incarcerated prompted the syndrome s key symptoms The study touched on the malingering controversy surrounding the syndrome as well as the stress component that often precedes the disorder 10 According to consultant psychiatrist F A Whitlock Ganser syndrome is a hysterical disorder on par with Ganser s description of the disorder 1 Whitlock pointed to the number of cases in which Ganser syndrome was reported in settings of organic brain disease or functional psychosis as evidence of its hysterical foundations 1 Kraepelin and Bumke also believed the syndrome to be of a hysterical nature 4 Bumke thought the syndrome hysterical because amnesia for a traumatic emotional event tends to occur in hysteria more than in other disorders 4 The giving of approximate answers is thought to be produced in hysterical personalities 4 According to Mayer Gross and Bleuler Ganser syndrome occurs mainly in epileptic or schizophrenic patients 4 Still others claim that an organic condition that could lead to the manifestation of Ganser syndrome symptoms would have to be at an advanced stage in which a diagnosis could be easily given 11 There have also been reports of trauma and stroke patients with the syndrome A study investigating the neurological basis of Ganser syndrome described a patient with symptoms of the disorder who had a history of stroke and bifrontal infarcts 12 They discovered that hyperglutamatergic states which are caused by both strokes and stress share a relationship with dissociative symptoms suggesting a possible organic pathology that can predispose individuals to the syndrome 12 Wirtz and colleagues 2008 described a patient with Ganser syndrome after a left hemispheric middle cerebral artery infarct 12 A neuropsychological examination revealed atypical lateralisation of cognitive functions leading to the conclusion that the giving of approximate answers might be related to frontal executive cerebral dysfunction 12 Diagnosis editGanser syndrome was listed under Factitious Disorder with Psychological Symptoms in the DSM III 13 The criteria of this category emphasized symptoms that cannot be explained by other mental disorders psychological symptoms under the control of the individual and the goal of assuming a patient role not otherwise understandable given their circumstances 13 The DSM IV TR classified Ganser syndrome as a dissociative disorder defined by the giving of approximate answers to questions e g 2 plus 2 equals 5 when not associated with dissociative amnesia or dissociative fugue 8 The ICD 10 6 and DSM IV do not specify any diagnostic criteria apart from approximate answers as a requirement for a Ganser syndrome diagnosis 8 Most case studies of the syndrome also depend on the presence of approximate answers and at least one of the other symptoms described by Ganser in his original paper 4 Usually when giving wrong answers individuals are only slightly off showing that the individual understood the question 10 For instance when asked how many legs a horse has they might say five Although subjects appear confused in their answers in other respects they appear to understand their surroundings 10 Amnesia loss of personal identity and clouding of consciousness were among the most common symptoms apart from approximate answers 4 Although there is currently no uniform way to diagnose the syndrome a full neurological and mental state examination is recommended to determine its presence as well as tests that assess malingering 7 In addition to mental examination other investigations should be done to exclude other underlying causes These include computer tomography scans CT or magnetic resonance imaging MRI scans to exclude structural pathology lumbar puncture to exclude meningitis or encephalitis and electroencephalography EEG to exclude delirium or seizure disorder 14 Diagnosing Ganser syndrome is challenging because of its rarity and symptom variability The manifested symptoms may be dependent on the individual s conception of what mental illness entails creating the possibility of a wide range of combinations of symptoms present in an individual with Ganser syndrome 7 Treatment editIn many cases the symptoms seem to dwindle after a few days and patients are often left with amnesia for the period of psychosis 4 Hospitalization may be necessary during the acute phase of symptoms and psychiatric care if the patient is a danger to self or others 15 A neurological consult is advised to rule out any organic cause Psychotherapy may also recommended for ensuring and maintaining safety Ganser patients typically recover quickly and completely 16 Since Ganser syndrome can be a response to psychic deterioration its resolution may be followed by other psychiatric symptoms such as schizophrenia 17 and depression 18 hence the rationale behind the recommendation of psychotherapy Medication is usually not required 15 Epidemiology editReviewing multiple collections of case studies the incidence of the disorder is not precisely known 14 19 20 21 Individuals of multiple backgrounds have been reported as having the disorder The syndrome was historically thought to be more common in men However Whitlock 1 speculates that the higher reported rate of Ganser in men might be due to the greater proportion of men who are incarcerated 20 22 It has been most frequently seen in individuals ages 15 to 40 and has also been observed in children 23 This wide age range is derived from case studies and therefore may not be an accurate estimate Ganser syndrome has also been observed in groups other than prison populations 1 Controversy editThere is controversy regarding whether Ganser syndrome is a valid clinical entity 7 For example Bromberg 1986 has argued that the syndrome is not due to or related to mental illness but rather a sort of defense against legal punishment 10 Some see it as conscious lying denial and repression presenting Ganser syndrome symptoms as malingering instead of a dissociative or factitious disorder 10 One case study of Ganser syndrome presented a middle aged man who had been in a car crash and wanted disability insurance benefits 24 Since he had a big incentive psychologists took careful measures and implemented testing with malingering instruments which showed that the man performed below chance on simple memory tests and claimed to experience non existent symptoms 24 Upon further inspection of the collateral information they found that the patient took part in high level sports and other activities that were inconsistent with the cognitive dysfunctions he reported and they determined it to be a case of malingering 24 Estes and New 1948 concluded that the motivation for the symptoms of the syndrome was escaping an intolerable situation 10 Stern and Whiles proposed an alternative explanation citing Ganser syndrome presented itself in individuals who although not psychologically well do not realize it and want to appear so 10 Still others attribute the syndrome to inattention purposeful evasion suppression alcoholic excess head injury and to unconscious attempts to deceive others as a means to free themselves from responsibility for their actions 10 This denial of behaviour can be seen as a way to overcome anxiety and helplessness brought on by the stressful event that often precedes the syndrome 10 These aetiological debates focus on the main symptom of Ganser syndrome and its importance in its diagnosis Approximate answers are prominent in the Ganser syndrome literature causing concern in those who believe that this is a relatively simple symptom to feign 7 Ganser syndrome was regarded as an Adjustment Reaction of Adult Life in the DSM II and later was moved under the category of Factitious Disorder with Psychological Symptoms in the DSM III 13 Ganser syndrome can also be found under the Dissociative Disorder Not Otherwise Specified DDNOS section of the DSM IV TR 8 however it is not listed in the DSM 5 which got rid of the DDNOS section and replaced it with Other Specified Dissociative Disorder OSDD and Unspecified Dissociative Disorder USDD 25 Despite this the International Classification of Diseases has Ganser syndrome listed under dissociative disorders 6 Popular Media editIn the novel Red Dragon by author Thomas Harris there is a scene where Hannibal Lector reports Dr Chilton chief of staff at the mental hospital where he resides to have attributed Lector having Ganser syndrome as a reason to why he avoided prison Chilton claims so in order to avoid embarrassment at Lector easily outsmarting him through the various tests Chilton tried to give him in order to better understand Lector 26 See also editParaphasiaReferences edit a b c d e f g h i Whitlock F A 1967 The Ganser Syndrome British Journal of Psychiatry 113 494 19 29 doi 10 1192 bjp 113 494 19 Renzulli Isobel 2022 01 02 Prison abolition international human rights law perspectives The International Journal of Human Rights 26 1 100 121 doi 10 1080 13642987 2021 1895766 ISSN 1364 2987 S2CID 233661791 a b Knoblosh F 1986 Ganser Syndrome and DSM III American Journal of Psychiatry 143 3 393 393 a b c d e f g h i Weiner H Brainman A 1955 The Ganser Syndrome A Review and Addition of Some Unusual Cases American Journal of Psychiatry 111 10 767 773 doi 10 1176 ajp 111 10 767 Mendis S Hodgson R E 2012 Ganser Syndrome examining the aetiological debate through a systematic case report review European Journal of Psychiatry 26 2 doi 10 4321 S0213 61632012000200003 a b c World Health Organization 1992 The ICD 10 classification of mental and behavioural disorders Clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines Geneva World Health Organization a b c d e Epstein R S 1991 Ganser Syndrome Trance Logic and the Question of Malingering Psychiatric Annals 21 4 238 244 doi 10 3928 0048 5713 19910401 11 a b c d American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th ed Text rev Washington DC American Psychiatric Association 2000 a b Cocores J A Santa W G Patel L MD 1985 The Ganser Syndrome Evidence Suggesting its Classification as a Dissociative Disorder The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine 14 1 47 56 a b c d e f g h i Bromberg W 1986 The neglect of Ganser Syndrome The American Journal of Psychiatry 143 7 937 938 Koenig T Lee H B 2001 A Case of Ganser Syndrome Organic or Hysterical General Hospital Psychiatry 23 4 230 231 doi 10 1016 S0163 8343 01 00147 5 a b c d Ouyang D Duggal H S amp Jacob N J 2003 Neurobiological Basis of Ganser Syndrome Indian Journal of Psychiatry 45 4 255 256 a b c American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 3rd ed Washington DC American Psychiatric Association 1952 a b Dwyer J Reid S 2004 Ganser s Syndrome The Lancet 364 9432 471 473 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 04 16772 X a b Carney M W P Chary T N K Robotis P Childs A 1987 Ganser Syndrome and its Management British Journal of Psychiatry 151 697 700 doi 10 1192 bjp 151 5 697 Enoch M D amp Irving G 1962 The Ganser syndrome Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 38 3 213 222 Lieberman A A 1954 The Ganser Syndrome in Psychoses Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 120 1 2 10 16 doi 10 1097 00005053 195407000 00002 Haddah P M 1993 Ganser Syndrome Followed by Major Depressive Episode British Journal of Psychiatry 161 251 253 doi 10 1192 bjp 162 2 251 Sigal Mircea Altmark David Alfici Susana Gelkopf Marc 1992 Ganser syndrome A review of 15 cases Comprehensive Psychiatry 33 2 134 138 doi 10 1016 0010 440X 92 90011 E PMID 1544298 a b Henrik Steen Andersen Dorte Sestof 2001 Ganser syndrome after solitary confinement in prison A short review and a case report Nordic Journal of Psychiatry 55 3 199 201 doi 10 1080 08039480152036083 ISSN 0803 9488 PMID 11827615 S2CID 218895869 Agarwal S Dhami A Dahuja M amp Choudhary S 2018 Ganser syndrome in adolescent male A rare case report Journal of Indian Association for Child amp Adolescent Mental Health 14 1 Wincewicz Karolina Sapota Zareba Karolina Nasierowski Tadeusz 2022 02 27 Ganser syndrome a dissociative disorder or a factitious disorder A case report Psychiatria Polska 56 1 63 75 doi 10 12740 PP 129012 ISSN 0033 2674 PMID 35569148 S2CID 247590444 Miller P Bramble D Buxton N 1997 Case Study Ganser Syndrome in Children and Adolescents Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 36 1 112 115 doi 10 1097 00004583 199701000 00024 a b c Merckelbach H Peters M Jelicic M Brands I and Smeets T 2006 Detecting malingering of Ganser like symptoms with tests A case study Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences 60 636 638 doi 10 1111 j 1440 1819 2006 01571 x American Psychiatric Association 2013 Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders 5th ed Arlington VA American Psychiatric Publishing Harris Thomas October 1981 Red Dragon Dell Publishing ISBN 0 399 12442 X Further reading editSchutzman Mady 2003 Being Approximate The Ganser Syndrome and Beyond PDF Journal of Medical Humanities 24 1 2 147 158 doi 10 1023 A 1021318118143 S2CID 141323730 Retrieved 14 December 2010 External links edit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ganser syndrome amp oldid 1190477241, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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