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Clinical lycanthropy

Clinical lycanthropy is a rare psychiatric syndrome that involves a delusion that the affected person can transform into, has transformed into, or is, a non-human animal.[1] Its name is associated with the mythical condition of lycanthropy, a supernatural affliction in which humans are said to physically shapeshift into wolves.[2]

Clinical lycanthropy
Other namesZoanthropy
SpecialtyPsychiatry

Signs and symptoms edit

Affected individuals believe that they are in the process of transforming into an animal or have already transformed into an animal. Clinical Lycanthropy has been associated with the altered states of mind that accompany psychosis (the mental state that typically involves delusions and hallucinations) with the transformation only seeming to happen in the mind and behavior of the affected person.

A study[3] on clinical lycanthropy from the McLean Hospital reported on a series of cases and proposed some diagnostic criteria by which clinical lycanthropy could be recognised:

  • A patient reports in a moment of lucidity or reminiscence that they sometimes feel as an animal or have felt like one.
  • A patient behaves in a manner that resembles animal behavior, for example howling, growling, or crawling.

According to these criteria, either a delusional belief in current or past transformation or behavior that suggests a person thinks of themselves as transformed is considered evidence of clinical lycanthropy. The authors note that, although the condition seems to be an expression of psychosis, there is no specific diagnosis of mental or neurological illness associated with its behavioral consequences.

It also seems that clinical lycanthropy is not specific to an experience of human-to-wolf transformation; a wide variety of creatures have been reported as part of the shape-shifting experience. A review[1] of the medical literature from early 2004 lists over thirty published cases of clinical lycanthropy, only the minority of which have wolf (Lycanthropy) or dog (Cynanthropy) themes. Canines are certainly not uncommon, although the experience of being transformed into other animals such as a hyena, cat, horse, bird or tiger has been reported on more than one occasion. Transformation into frogs, and even bees, has been reported in some instances. The term ophidianthropy refers to the delusion that one has been transformed into a snake, of which two case studies have been reported.[4][5] In Japan, transformation into foxes and dogs was common (ja:狐憑き, ja:犬神). A 1989 case study[6] described how one individual reported a serial transformation, experiencing a change from human to dog, to horse, and then finally cat, before returning to the reality of human existence after treatment. There are also reports of people who experienced transformation into an animal only listed as "unspecified".

Proposed mechanisms edit

Clinical lycanthropy is a very rare condition and is largely considered to be an idiosyncratic expression of a psychotic or dissociative episode caused by another condition such as Dissociative Identity Disorder, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder or clinical depression. It has also been associated with drug intoxication and withdrawal, cerebrovascular disease, traumatic brain injury, dementia, delirium, and seizures.[7]

However, there are suggestions that certain neurological conditions and cultural influences may result in the expression of the human-animal transformation theme that defines the condition.

Neurological factors edit

One important factor may be differences or changes in parts of the brain known to be involved in representing body shape (e.g., see proprioception and body image). A neuroimaging study of two people diagnosed with clinical lycanthropy showed that these areas display unusual activation, suggesting that when people report their bodies are changing shape, they may be genuinely perceiving those feelings.[8]

Treatment edit

Because clinical lycanthropy is strongly associated with psychotic disorders, antipsychotic medication is often an effective treatment. It may also be treated with antidepressants or mood stabilizers, in cases in which it is a symptom of depression or bipolar disorder. Patients with clinical lycanthropy may also benefit from a cultural approach to treatment, as the syndrome is generally agreed to be culture-bound.[9]

Related disorders edit

Clinical lycanthropy is a type of delusional misidentification syndrome of the self, and it often overlaps with other delusional misidentification syndromes.[10] For example, there is a case study of a psychiatric patient who had both clinical lycanthropy and Cotard delusion.[11]

In rare cases, individuals may believe that other people have transformed into animals.[12] This has been termed "lycanthropic intermetamorphosis"[8] and "lycanthropy spectrum".[12] A 2009 study reported that, after the consumption of the drug MDMA (Ecstasy), a man displayed symptoms of paranoid psychosis by claiming that his relatives had changed into various animals such as a boar, a donkey and a horse.[13]

History edit

Catherine Clark Kroeger has written that several parts of the Bible refer to King Nebuchadnezzar's behavior in the book of Daniel 4 as being a manifestation of clinical lycanthropy.[14] Neurologist Andrew J. Larner has written that the fate of Odysseus's crew due to the magic of Circe may be one of the earliest examples of clinical lycanthropy.[15]

It is believed that the Armenian king Tiridates III also had this disorder. He was cured by Gregory the Illuminator.

According to Persian tradition, the Buyid prince Majd al-Dawla was experiencing an illusion that he was a cow. He was cured by Ibn Sina.[16]

Notions that lycanthropy was due to a medical condition go back to the seventh century, when the Alexandrian physician Paulus Aegineta attributed lycanthropy to melancholia or an "excess of black bile".[17] During 1563, a Lutheran physician named Johann Weyer wrote that werewolves had an imbalance in their melancholic humour and exhibited the physical symptoms of paleness, "a dry tongue and a great thirst" as well as sunken, dim and dry eyes.[17] Even King James VI and I in his 1597 treatise Daemonologie does not blame werewolf behaviour on delusions created by the Devil but "an excess of melancholy as the culprit which causes some men to believe that they are wolves and to 'counterfeit' the actions of these animals".[18] The perception of an association between mental illness and animalistic behaviour can be traced throughout the history of folklore from many different countries.[19]

Case examples edit

On August 15, 2016, Martin County Florida Sheriff's Office deputies found a 19-year-old male on top of a bloodied 59-year-old man, gnawing on his face, eating pieces of flesh, and making growling sounds. Officers tased, repeatedly kicked, and ultimately required a police dog's assistance in subduing the 19-year-old. Inside the garage of the home on Southeast Kokomo Lane, just north of the Palm Beach County line, deputies found a 53-year-old woman, beaten, bloodied and unresponsive. Ultimately both the 59-year-old man and 53-year-old woman would die from their injuries. In the weeks ahead of this incident, the 19-year-old told family members he believed he was either half-man, half-horse or half-man, half-dog. Clinical psychologist Dr. Phillip Resnick later assessed the 19-year-old as having clinical lycanthropy.[20][21]

A 20-year-old man was admitted to a mental hospital due to his increasingly agitated and erratic behaviors. During his initial evaluation, he was guarded and preoccupied. He had no previous psychiatric history. Over the next few days, he displayed increasingly psychotic, animal-like behaviors. These behaviors included howling loudly, running abruptly, and walking on all fours (known as quadrobics). He appeared to be internally stimulated. When asked about these behaviors, he was initially evasive but eventually admitted that he believed he was a werewolf and would periodically transform into a wolf. He started believing this after having visions of "the Devil" years before and reported hearing random voices. The patient was started on ziprasidone and his symptoms gradually responded and his animal-like behaviors eventually ceased altogether.[22]

A 25-year-old man was sent for treatment during a period of excessive hand-washing, irritable behavior, decreased sleep, and acting like a buffalo. The patient reported that he had engaged in sexual activity with his buffalo and believed that buffalo cells had entered his body and were transforming him into a buffalo. He began obsessively washing his hands and genitals in order to avoid the transition. He saw himself as having buffalo body parts and became preoccupied about his appearance. He then began to act as a buffalo by nodding his head, walking on all fours, and seeking out hay and grass to eat. He was ultimately diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder and body dysmorphic disorder with delusional beliefs. He was treated with fluoxetine and risperidone, and after 6 months of pharmacotherapy, his body dysmorphia and hand-washing were both reduced.[7]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Garlipp P, Gödecke-Koch T, Dietrich DE, Haltenhof H (January 2004). "Lycanthropy--psychopathological and psychodynamical aspects". Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 109 (1): 19–22. doi:10.1046/j.1600-0447.2003.00243.x. PMID 14674954. S2CID 41324350.
  2. ^ Degroot, J.J.M. (2003). Religious System of China. Kessinger Publishing. p. 484.
  3. ^ Keck PE, Pope HG, Hudson JI, McElroy SL, Kulick AR (February 1988). "Lycanthropy: alive and well in the twentieth century". Psychological Medicine. 18 (1): 113–20. doi:10.1017/S003329170000194X. PMID 3363031. S2CID 27491377.
  4. ^ Kattimani, S, Menon, V., Srivastava, M.K. & Aniruddha Mukharjee, A. (2010). "Ophidianthropy: The Case of a Woman Who 'Turned into a Snake'" 2014-04-16 at the Wayback Machine. Psychiatry Reports.
  5. ^ Mondal, Gargi; Nizamie, Shamsul H.; Mukherjee, Nirmalya; Tikka, Sai K.; Jaiswal, Bikramaditya (2014). "The 'snake' man: Ophidianthropy in a case of schizophrenia, along with literature review". Asian Journal of Psychiatry. 12: 148–149. doi:10.1016/j.ajp.2014.10.002. PMID 25453533.
  6. ^ Dening TR, West A (1989). "Multiple Serial Lycanthropy. A Case Report". Psychopathology. 22 (6): 344–7. doi:10.1159/000284617. PMID 2639384.
  7. ^ a b Mudgal, Varchasvi; Alam, Mohd. R.; Niranjan, Vijay; Jain, Priyash; Pal, Virendra S. (2021). "A Rare Report of Clinical Lycanthropy in Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders". Cureus. 13 (2): e13346. doi:10.7759/cureus.13346. PMC 7971710. PMID 33754087.
  8. ^ a b Moselhy HF (1999). "Lycanthropy: New Evidence of its Origin". Psychopathology. 32 (4): 173–176. doi:10.1159/000029086. PMID 10364725. S2CID 8175369. from the original on 2011-06-15. Retrieved 2009-02-23.
  9. ^ Guessoum, Sélim Benjamin; Benoit, Laelia; Minassian, Sevan; Mallet, Jasmina; Moro, Marie Rose (2021). "Clinical Lycanthropy, Neurobiology, Culture: A Systematic Review". Frontiers in Psychiatry. 12: 718101. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2021.718101. PMC 8542696. PMID 34707519.
  10. ^ Guessoum, Sélim Benjamin; Benoit, Laelia; Minassian, Sevan; Mallet, Jasmina; Moro, Marie Rose (2021). "Clinical Lycanthropy, Neurobiology, Culture: A Systematic Review". Frontiers in Psychiatry. 12: 718101. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2021.718101. ISSN 1664-0640. PMC 8542696. PMID 34707519.
  11. ^ Nejad AG, Toofani K (2005). "Co-Existence of Lycanthropy and Cotard's Syndrome in a Single Case". Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 111 (3): 250–252. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0447.2004.00438.x. PMID 15701110. S2CID 21040942.
  12. ^ a b Nejad, A. G. (2007). "Belief in transforming another person into a wolf: Could it be a variant of lycanthropy?". Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 115 (2): 159–161. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0447.2006.00891.x. PMID 17244180. S2CID 45455487.
  13. ^ Nasirian, M.; Banazadeh, N.; Kheradmand, A. (2009). "Rare Variant of Lycanthropy and Ecstasy". Addiction & Health. 1 (1): 53–56. PMC 3905497. PMID 24494083.
  14. ^ Kroeger, Catherine Clark; Evans, Mary J. (2009). The Women's Study Bible: New Living Translation (Second ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-529125-4.
  15. ^ Larner, Andrew J (September–October 2010). "Neurological Signs: Lycanthropy" (PDF). Advances in Clinical Neuroscience and Rehabilitation. 10 (4): 50. (PDF) from the original on 30 October 2012. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
  16. ^ "معالجه کردن بوعلی سینا / آن صاحب مالیخولیا را". 21 August 2008. from the original on 2017-06-12. Retrieved 2017-05-30.
  17. ^ a b Sconduto 2008, p. 131.
  18. ^ Sconduto 2008, p. 156.
  19. ^ Metzger, N. (2013). "Battling demons with medical authority: Werewolves, physicians and rationalization". History of Psychiatry. 24 (3): 341–355. doi:10.1177/0957154X13482835. PMC 4090416. PMID 24573449.
  20. ^ Winston, Hannah. "Three years later, Austin Harrouff case still puzzles many". The Palm Beach Post. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  21. ^ Winston, Hannah (28 March 2019). "Doctor: Austin Harrouff thought he was 'half-dog, half-man' in 2016 double homicide". The Palm Beach Post. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  22. ^ Shrestha, Rajeet (January 2014). "Clinical Lycanthropy: Delusional Misidentification of the 'Self'". The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences. 26 (1): E53–E54. doi:10.1176/appi.neuropsych.13030057. ISSN 0895-0172. PMID 24515715.

Works cited edit

  • Sconduto, Leslie A. (2008). Metamorphoses of the Werewolf: A Literary Study from Antiquity Through the Renaissance. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-7864-3559-3.

Further reading edit

  • Fahy, TA (January 1989). "Lycanthropy: A Review". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 82 (1): 37–9. doi:10.1177/014107688908200115. PMC 1291962. PMID 2647981.

Further reading edit

  • Blom, Jan Dirk (2014). "When doctors cry wolf: A systematic review of the literature on clinical lycanthropy". History of Psychiatry. 25 (1): 87–102. doi:10.1177/0957154X13512192. PMID 24594823. S2CID 1818105.
  • Bou Khalil, Rami; Dahdah, Pierre; Richa, Sami; Kahn, David A. (2012). "Lycanthropy as a Culture-Bound Syndrome". Journal of Psychiatric Practice. 18 (1): 51–54. doi:10.1097/01.pra.0000410988.38723.a3. PMID 22261984. S2CID 23568066.
  • Keck, Paul E.; Pope, Harrison G.; Hudson, James I.; McElroy, Susan L.; Kulick, Aaron R. (1988). "Lycanthropy: Alive and well in the twentieth century". Psychological Medicine. 18 (1): 113–120. doi:10.1017/S003329170000194X. PMID 3363031. S2CID 27491377.
  • Koehler, K.; Ebel, H.; Vartzopoulos, D. (1990). "Lycanthropy and demonomania: Some psychopathological issues". Psychological Medicine. 20 (3): 629–633. doi:10.1017/S0033291700017141. PMID 2236372. S2CID 43835561.
  • Metzger, Nadine (2013). "Battling demons with medical authority: Werewolves, physicians and rationalization". History of Psychiatry. 24 (3): 341–355. doi:10.1177/0957154X13482835. PMC 4090416. PMID 24573449.
  • Moselhy, Hamdy F. (1999). "Lycanthropy: New Evidence of Its Origin". Psychopathology. 32 (4): 173–176. doi:10.1159/000029086. PMID 10364725. S2CID 8175369.

External links edit

  • "Real-Life Werewolves: Psychiatry Re-Examines Rare Delusion"

clinical, lycanthropy, confused, with, werewolf, syndrome, otherkin, therianthropy, rare, psychiatric, syndrome, that, involves, delusion, that, affected, person, transform, into, transformed, into, human, animal, name, associated, with, mythical, condition, l. Not to be confused with Werewolf syndrome Otherkin or Therianthropy Clinical lycanthropy is a rare psychiatric syndrome that involves a delusion that the affected person can transform into has transformed into or is a non human animal 1 Its name is associated with the mythical condition of lycanthropy a supernatural affliction in which humans are said to physically shapeshift into wolves 2 Clinical lycanthropyOther namesZoanthropySpecialtyPsychiatry Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 2 Proposed mechanisms 2 1 Neurological factors 2 2 Treatment 3 Related disorders 4 History 5 Case examples 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Works cited 7 3 Further reading 8 Further reading 9 External linksSigns and symptoms editAffected individuals believe that they are in the process of transforming into an animal or have already transformed into an animal Clinical Lycanthropy has been associated with the altered states of mind that accompany psychosis the mental state that typically involves delusions and hallucinations with the transformation only seeming to happen in the mind and behavior of the affected person A study 3 on clinical lycanthropy from the McLean Hospital reported on a series of cases and proposed some diagnostic criteria by which clinical lycanthropy could be recognised A patient reports in a moment of lucidity or reminiscence that they sometimes feel as an animal or have felt like one A patient behaves in a manner that resembles animal behavior for example howling growling or crawling According to these criteria either a delusional belief in current or past transformation or behavior that suggests a person thinks of themselves as transformed is considered evidence of clinical lycanthropy The authors note that although the condition seems to be an expression of psychosis there is no specific diagnosis of mental or neurological illness associated with its behavioral consequences It also seems that clinical lycanthropy is not specific to an experience of human to wolf transformation a wide variety of creatures have been reported as part of the shape shifting experience A review 1 of the medical literature from early 2004 lists over thirty published cases of clinical lycanthropy only the minority of which have wolf Lycanthropy or dog Cynanthropy themes Canines are certainly not uncommon although the experience of being transformed into other animals such as a hyena cat horse bird or tiger has been reported on more than one occasion Transformation into frogs and even bees has been reported in some instances The term ophidianthropy refers to the delusion that one has been transformed into a snake of which two case studies have been reported 4 5 In Japan transformation into foxes and dogs was common ja 狐憑き ja 犬神 A 1989 case study 6 described how one individual reported a serial transformation experiencing a change from human to dog to horse and then finally cat before returning to the reality of human existence after treatment There are also reports of people who experienced transformation into an animal only listed as unspecified Proposed mechanisms editThis section relies largely or entirely upon a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources at this section October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Clinical lycanthropy is a very rare condition and is largely considered to be an idiosyncratic expression of a psychotic or dissociative episode caused by another condition such as Dissociative Identity Disorder schizophrenia bipolar disorder or clinical depression It has also been associated with drug intoxication and withdrawal cerebrovascular disease traumatic brain injury dementia delirium and seizures 7 However there are suggestions that certain neurological conditions and cultural influences may result in the expression of the human animal transformation theme that defines the condition Neurological factors edit One important factor may be differences or changes in parts of the brain known to be involved in representing body shape e g see proprioception and body image A neuroimaging study of two people diagnosed with clinical lycanthropy showed that these areas display unusual activation suggesting that when people report their bodies are changing shape they may be genuinely perceiving those feelings 8 Treatment edit Because clinical lycanthropy is strongly associated with psychotic disorders antipsychotic medication is often an effective treatment It may also be treated with antidepressants or mood stabilizers in cases in which it is a symptom of depression or bipolar disorder Patients with clinical lycanthropy may also benefit from a cultural approach to treatment as the syndrome is generally agreed to be culture bound 9 Related disorders editClinical lycanthropy is a type of delusional misidentification syndrome of the self and it often overlaps with other delusional misidentification syndromes 10 For example there is a case study of a psychiatric patient who had both clinical lycanthropy and Cotard delusion 11 In rare cases individuals may believe that other people have transformed into animals 12 This has been termed lycanthropic intermetamorphosis 8 and lycanthropy spectrum 12 A 2009 study reported that after the consumption of the drug MDMA Ecstasy a man displayed symptoms of paranoid psychosis by claiming that his relatives had changed into various animals such as a boar a donkey and a horse 13 History editCatherine Clark Kroeger has written that several parts of the Bible refer to King Nebuchadnezzar s behavior in the book of Daniel 4 as being a manifestation of clinical lycanthropy 14 Neurologist Andrew J Larner has written that the fate of Odysseus s crew due to the magic of Circe may be one of the earliest examples of clinical lycanthropy 15 It is believed that the Armenian king Tiridates III also had this disorder He was cured by Gregory the Illuminator According to Persian tradition the Buyid prince Majd al Dawla was experiencing an illusion that he was a cow He was cured by Ibn Sina 16 Notions that lycanthropy was due to a medical condition go back to the seventh century when the Alexandrian physician Paulus Aegineta attributed lycanthropy to melancholia or an excess of black bile 17 During 1563 a Lutheran physician named Johann Weyer wrote that werewolves had an imbalance in their melancholic humour and exhibited the physical symptoms of paleness a dry tongue and a great thirst as well as sunken dim and dry eyes 17 Even King James VI and I in his 1597 treatise Daemonologie does not blame werewolf behaviour on delusions created by the Devil but an excess of melancholy as the culprit which causes some men to believe that they are wolves and to counterfeit the actions of these animals 18 The perception of an association between mental illness and animalistic behaviour can be traced throughout the history of folklore from many different countries 19 Case examples editOn August 15 2016 Martin County Florida Sheriff s Office deputies found a 19 year old male on top of a bloodied 59 year old man gnawing on his face eating pieces of flesh and making growling sounds Officers tased repeatedly kicked and ultimately required a police dog s assistance in subduing the 19 year old Inside the garage of the home on Southeast Kokomo Lane just north of the Palm Beach County line deputies found a 53 year old woman beaten bloodied and unresponsive Ultimately both the 59 year old man and 53 year old woman would die from their injuries In the weeks ahead of this incident the 19 year old told family members he believed he was either half man half horse or half man half dog Clinical psychologist Dr Phillip Resnick later assessed the 19 year old as having clinical lycanthropy 20 21 A 20 year old man was admitted to a mental hospital due to his increasingly agitated and erratic behaviors During his initial evaluation he was guarded and preoccupied He had no previous psychiatric history Over the next few days he displayed increasingly psychotic animal like behaviors These behaviors included howling loudly running abruptly and walking on all fours known as quadrobics He appeared to be internally stimulated When asked about these behaviors he was initially evasive but eventually admitted that he believed he was a werewolf and would periodically transform into a wolf He started believing this after having visions of the Devil years before and reported hearing random voices The patient was started on ziprasidone and his symptoms gradually responded and his animal like behaviors eventually ceased altogether 22 A 25 year old man was sent for treatment during a period of excessive hand washing irritable behavior decreased sleep and acting like a buffalo The patient reported that he had engaged in sexual activity with his buffalo and believed that buffalo cells had entered his body and were transforming him into a buffalo He began obsessively washing his hands and genitals in order to avoid the transition He saw himself as having buffalo body parts and became preoccupied about his appearance He then began to act as a buffalo by nodding his head walking on all fours and seeking out hay and grass to eat He was ultimately diagnosed with obsessive compulsive disorder and body dysmorphic disorder with delusional beliefs He was treated with fluoxetine and risperidone and after 6 months of pharmacotherapy his body dysmorphia and hand washing were both reduced 7 See also editBoanthropy Clinical vampirism Kitsunetsuki Man into Wolf Otherkin Therianthropy Wendigo WerewolfReferences editCitations edit a b Garlipp P Godecke Koch T Dietrich DE Haltenhof H January 2004 Lycanthropy psychopathological and psychodynamical aspects Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 109 1 19 22 doi 10 1046 j 1600 0447 2003 00243 x PMID 14674954 S2CID 41324350 Degroot J J M 2003 Religious System of China Kessinger Publishing p 484 Keck PE Pope HG Hudson JI McElroy SL Kulick AR February 1988 Lycanthropy alive and well in the twentieth century Psychological Medicine 18 1 113 20 doi 10 1017 S003329170000194X PMID 3363031 S2CID 27491377 Kattimani S Menon V Srivastava M K amp Aniruddha Mukharjee A 2010 Ophidianthropy The Case of a Woman Who Turned into a Snake Archived 2014 04 16 at the Wayback Machine Psychiatry Reports Mondal Gargi Nizamie Shamsul H Mukherjee Nirmalya Tikka Sai K Jaiswal Bikramaditya 2014 The snake man Ophidianthropy in a case of schizophrenia along with literature review Asian Journal of Psychiatry 12 148 149 doi 10 1016 j ajp 2014 10 002 PMID 25453533 Dening TR West A 1989 Multiple Serial Lycanthropy A Case Report Psychopathology 22 6 344 7 doi 10 1159 000284617 PMID 2639384 a b Mudgal Varchasvi Alam Mohd R Niranjan Vijay Jain Priyash Pal Virendra S 2021 A Rare Report of Clinical Lycanthropy in Obsessive Compulsive and Related Disorders Cureus 13 2 e13346 doi 10 7759 cureus 13346 PMC 7971710 PMID 33754087 a b Moselhy HF 1999 Lycanthropy New Evidence of its Origin Psychopathology 32 4 173 176 doi 10 1159 000029086 PMID 10364725 S2CID 8175369 Archived from the original on 2011 06 15 Retrieved 2009 02 23 Guessoum Selim Benjamin Benoit Laelia Minassian Sevan Mallet Jasmina Moro Marie Rose 2021 Clinical Lycanthropy Neurobiology Culture A Systematic Review Frontiers in Psychiatry 12 718101 doi 10 3389 fpsyt 2021 718101 PMC 8542696 PMID 34707519 Guessoum Selim Benjamin Benoit Laelia Minassian Sevan Mallet Jasmina Moro Marie Rose 2021 Clinical Lycanthropy Neurobiology Culture A Systematic Review Frontiers in Psychiatry 12 718101 doi 10 3389 fpsyt 2021 718101 ISSN 1664 0640 PMC 8542696 PMID 34707519 Nejad AG Toofani K 2005 Co Existence of Lycanthropy and Cotard s Syndrome in a Single Case Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 111 3 250 252 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0447 2004 00438 x PMID 15701110 S2CID 21040942 a b Nejad A G 2007 Belief in transforming another person into a wolf Could it be a variant of lycanthropy Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 115 2 159 161 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0447 2006 00891 x PMID 17244180 S2CID 45455487 Nasirian M Banazadeh N Kheradmand A 2009 Rare Variant of Lycanthropy and Ecstasy Addiction amp Health 1 1 53 56 PMC 3905497 PMID 24494083 Kroeger Catherine Clark Evans Mary J 2009 The Women s Study Bible New Living Translation Second ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 529125 4 Larner Andrew J September October 2010 Neurological Signs Lycanthropy PDF Advances in Clinical Neuroscience and Rehabilitation 10 4 50 Archived PDF from the original on 30 October 2012 Retrieved 6 January 2012 معالجه کردن بوعلی سینا آن صاحب مالیخولیا را 21 August 2008 Archived from the original on 2017 06 12 Retrieved 2017 05 30 a b Sconduto 2008 p 131 Sconduto 2008 p 156 Metzger N 2013 Battling demons with medical authority Werewolves physicians and rationalization History of Psychiatry 24 3 341 355 doi 10 1177 0957154X13482835 PMC 4090416 PMID 24573449 Winston Hannah Three years later Austin Harrouff case still puzzles many The Palm Beach Post Retrieved 2 August 2022 Winston Hannah 28 March 2019 Doctor Austin Harrouff thought he was half dog half man in 2016 double homicide The Palm Beach Post Retrieved 2 August 2022 Shrestha Rajeet January 2014 Clinical Lycanthropy Delusional Misidentification of the Self The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences 26 1 E53 E54 doi 10 1176 appi neuropsych 13030057 ISSN 0895 0172 PMID 24515715 Works cited edit Sconduto Leslie A 2008 Metamorphoses of the Werewolf A Literary Study from Antiquity Through the Renaissance McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 3559 3 Further reading edit Fahy TA January 1989 Lycanthropy A Review Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 82 1 37 9 doi 10 1177 014107688908200115 PMC 1291962 PMID 2647981 Further reading editBlom Jan Dirk 2014 When doctors cry wolf A systematic review of the literature on clinical lycanthropy History of Psychiatry 25 1 87 102 doi 10 1177 0957154X13512192 PMID 24594823 S2CID 1818105 Bou Khalil Rami Dahdah Pierre Richa Sami Kahn David A 2012 Lycanthropy as a Culture Bound Syndrome Journal of Psychiatric Practice 18 1 51 54 doi 10 1097 01 pra 0000410988 38723 a3 PMID 22261984 S2CID 23568066 Keck Paul E Pope Harrison G Hudson James I McElroy Susan L Kulick Aaron R 1988 Lycanthropy Alive and well in the twentieth century Psychological Medicine 18 1 113 120 doi 10 1017 S003329170000194X PMID 3363031 S2CID 27491377 Koehler K Ebel H Vartzopoulos D 1990 Lycanthropy and demonomania Some psychopathological issues Psychological Medicine 20 3 629 633 doi 10 1017 S0033291700017141 PMID 2236372 S2CID 43835561 Metzger Nadine 2013 Battling demons with medical authority Werewolves physicians and rationalization History of Psychiatry 24 3 341 355 doi 10 1177 0957154X13482835 PMC 4090416 PMID 24573449 Moselhy Hamdy F 1999 Lycanthropy New Evidence of Its Origin Psychopathology 32 4 173 176 doi 10 1159 000029086 PMID 10364725 S2CID 8175369 External links edit Real Life Werewolves Psychiatry Re Examines Rare Delusion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clinical lycanthropy amp oldid 1218335579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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