Unpleasant dreamlike mentation can occur during non-rapid eye movement parasomnias, leading to associated panic attacks. The mentations are rarely remembered and are likely underreported. However, they may lead to significant personal distress and, if not addressed, may contribute to poorer clinical outcomes. Cotard le délire de negation are very rare nihilistic delusions, historically described with psychotic disorders. Their association with a variety of neurologic disorders, including migraine and cluster-headache, has also been reported. Here we present three cases of Cotard parasomnia during which distinct states of consciousness defined by nihilistic ideation occurred. Patients described believing they are dead or dying, while unable to perceive or experience their bodies in whole, or in part, as their own. A source analysis of the electroencephalographic fingerprint of these mentations suggests right-hemispheric hypoactivity subsequent to confusional arousals. Mechanistically, an aberrant activation of two major intrinsic brain networks of wakefulness, the salience network and the default mode network, is argued.

Cotard parasomnia: Le délire de negation that occur during the sleep-wake dissociation? / Gnoni, V.; Higgins, S.; Nesbitt, A. D.; Wasserman, D.; Duncan, I.; Birdseye, A.; Perez-Carbonell, L.; Drakatos, P.; Koutramanidis, M.; Ferini-Strambi, L.; Leschziner, G. D.; Rosenzweig, I.. - In: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL SLEEP MEDICINE. - ISSN 1550-9389. - 16:6(2020), pp. 971-976. [10.5664/jcsm.8430]

Cotard parasomnia: Le délire de negation that occur during the sleep-wake dissociation?

Ferini-Strambi L.;
2020-01-01

Abstract

Unpleasant dreamlike mentation can occur during non-rapid eye movement parasomnias, leading to associated panic attacks. The mentations are rarely remembered and are likely underreported. However, they may lead to significant personal distress and, if not addressed, may contribute to poorer clinical outcomes. Cotard le délire de negation are very rare nihilistic delusions, historically described with psychotic disorders. Their association with a variety of neurologic disorders, including migraine and cluster-headache, has also been reported. Here we present three cases of Cotard parasomnia during which distinct states of consciousness defined by nihilistic ideation occurred. Patients described believing they are dead or dying, while unable to perceive or experience their bodies in whole, or in part, as their own. A source analysis of the electroencephalographic fingerprint of these mentations suggests right-hemispheric hypoactivity subsequent to confusional arousals. Mechanistically, an aberrant activation of two major intrinsic brain networks of wakefulness, the salience network and the default mode network, is argued.
2020
Cotard delusion
Default mode network
EEG
Major intrinsic networks
Non-REM parasomnia
Salience network
Sleep
Sleep-wake transition
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/110995
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