A Homeless Person With Bipolar Disorder and a History of Serious Self-Mutilation
Case History
Psychiatric History
Mr. A, a 45-year-old, single, Caucasian man who was a patient at our day hospital, is a diagnostically complex patient with a long history of brittle bipolar disorder or, possibly, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar type. Over a period of 21 years, Mr. A has been hospitalized more than 20 times and has spent a total of more than 5 years of his life in psychiatric institutions. The vast majority of his admissions have been for manic episodes, often with psychotic features. He has had only one documented admission for depression, which, along with one other self-reported episode of depressive symptoms, was early in his clinical course.What is notable about Mr. A’s history is not necessarily his three suicide attempts but his two episodes of serious self-mutilation, which occurred many years apart and under very different circumstances. The psychiatric history that follows will give a broad overview of the course of his illness, with particular focus on his suicide attempts, episodes of serious self-mutilation, and the conditions at the time that these events took place.Mr. A had his first contact with the mental health system at the age of 24, when he was hospitalized for his first manic episode. He was in the hospital for 1 month and given lithium and haloperidol at first; eventually he was given fluphenazine decanoate on discharge. He was soon readmitted to the state facility for 9 months under the diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder (type not documented), and during this hospitalization he was given trifluoperazine and thioridazine as well as fluphenazine decanoate.During this second hospitalization, at the age of 25, while he was taking antipsychotic medication, he made his first suicide attempt. He had obtained a pass to attend the wedding of a woman whom he had always wanted to date, and several days after the ceremony he took an overdose (without medical sequelae) of No-Doze and ingested a pint of blackberry brandy. Mr. A stated that he was neither depressed nor manic at that time and that he had been medication compliant while in the hospital. In addition, he denied any recreational drug use before that episode.Mr. A reported that he eloped from the state hospital and after about 2 months of noncompliance with medication and outpatient treatment became so depressed that he could barely move. It was during this time, at the age of 26, that he tried to commit suicide for the second time by lighting his bed on fire while he was in it. He quickly doused the flames, but, ironically, his apartment building burned down the next day after another tenant fell asleep while smoking. This precipitated Mr. A’s first period of homelessness. Mr. A denied recreational drug use or psychotic symptoms before this suicide attempt.In his 26th year, Mr. A was hospitalized for 1 month at yet another state hospital, this time with a diagnosis of simple schizophrenia, which was treated with trifluoperazine and thiothixene. He eloped from a transitional halfway house and moved to the southeastern United States to live with his mother and stepfather.He remained out of treatment for about 3 months and was able to find employment as a night-shift janitor. He reported that during that time he was getting very little sleep, feeling “oppressed” by the intense heat, and that there was “no privacy” in his parents’ home (manifested by his recollection of his mother walking in on him one day while he was masturbating in his room). Several days after that incident, he told his mother that he wanted to quit his job and move back to New England. Mr. A reported that his mother’s response was unsympathetic and that she immediately left the house to go play cards with her friends. He identified her reaction as the precipitant to his most serious act of self-injury.Mr. A reported that he walked into the kitchen and picked up a knife that his stepfather had been using to cut tomatoes. He took the knife into the bathroom, and, in his words, “I looked into the mirror and prayed for God to forgive me.” He proceeded to inflict a number of wounds on himself, beginning with his right arm. He reported that the first cut severed his hand. A second slash, to his mid-forearm, was reportedly deep enough to leave the distal end of his arm hanging. A third cut to his upper right shoulder was more superficial. He made a fourth wound by stabbing himself in the bladder, then superficially lacerated his genitals and gouged his right leg. Mr. A does not recall feeling any pain while inflicting these wounds. His stepfather, who was home at the time, found him in the bathroom and called paramedics. Mr. A was hospitalized on a medical unit for 3 months, and his right arm was subsequently amputated below the elbow. When asked about this later, Mr. A was unsure whether he was trying to kill himself at the time.Mr. A’s affective state during this episode is unclear because he has given conflicting reports about it. He said that he was not using recreational drugs and that he just remembered being angry with his mother for making that comment. He denied any gross psychotic symptoms, but it is unclear from the records how disorganized he was at the time of the self-injury. It seems reasonable to suspect the presence of psychotic symptoms at the time of the serious self-injury, however, given that the medication regimen during the hospitalization before and after his auto-amputation included antipsychotics.Mr. A described his parents as unsupportive during that difficult time, stating that his mother saw him only once or twice during those 3 months. “My mom said that if I had just made one more paycheck I could have returned to New England. I wish that she would have told me that before.”Mr. A saw his stepfather only once during this hospitalization, but during that visit Mr. A told him that all he wanted to do was go to sleep and never wake up. His stepfather reportedly replied, “But I have already spent so much money on you.” That was the last time they had any contact with each other. His stepfather died of a heart attack about a month later, while Mr. A was still recuperating from the amputation.At age 27, Mr. A was transferred from the medical unit in the Southeast to a state hospital in New England. This was his only admission for depression (bipolar type, with psychotic features), and he was given amitriptyline in addition to thiothixine and chlorpromazine. Although compliant with his treatment regimen, while hospitalized he made his third suicide attempt by jumping into a river (without medical consequences). Mr. A could not identify a particular precipitant, but it appears from the record that he was having substantial difficulty adjusting to the loss of his arm. He was discharged after 10 months, but, at age 30, he was readmitted for a manic episode with psychotic features. He later eloped during a snowstorm and became homeless again.After his elopement, he moved to a major city in New England. During the 7 subsequent years he was never hospitalized, received no psychiatric medication or psychotherapy, and spent only 2 of the 7 years homeless. He was employed for a great deal of the time. He described himself during that period as being “happy and aggressive” and credited marijuana use (about “five joints a day”) for his success.At age 37, several weeks after his promotion to supervisor at his place of work and after an argument with his new girlfriend, Mr. A had his first hospitalization in our facility, which is funded by the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health. This manic episode terminated the 7-year period without psychiatric intervention.Between the ages of 37 and 45, Mr. A had seven hospitalizations in our institution. The precipitants, presentation, and course of each of these episodes have been remarkably similar. Most of the admissions were precipitated by the discontinuation of his psychiatric medications at the urging of his girlfriend, or, on one occasion, in the context of losing a therapist. He usually presented as floridly manic and quite psychotic by the time he was hospitalized. He usually required an average of 4 months on an inpatient unit to recuperate, but he had several admissions that lasted longer than 10 months.Typically, about 10 days after stopping his mood stabilizers and neuroleptics, Mr. A would become extremely manic. He was often found sweeping the streets, directing neighborhood traffic, attempting to organize a rock concert on the sidewalk, or donating his belongings to the poor by throwing them out of the window. At other times the police would find him barricaded in his apartment, walking around nude and quoting scripture.On initial evaluation, Mr. A would endorse a history of decreased sleep, racing thoughts, feeling “on top of the world,” and being able to “do anything, even become President.” The records describe Mr. A as having pressured speech, as well as being expansive, irritable, and grandiose. For example, he said he was “the Prince of Peace” and that he would win the Nobel Prize for an AIDS cure.In the chart he was also reported to be “grossly disorganized with loose associations” and to have paranoid ideation about gay men following him. Mr. A denied a history of auditory hallucinations, but the record indicates that he acknowledged one episode of command hallucinations to hurt his eye. There is no record of his endorsing thought broadcasting or thought insertion. According to the chart, however, he endorsed having ideas of reference for several days, thinking that the staff had planted graham crackers in his room as a sign that he should hurt himself. Hospital stays were typically characterized by his requiring chemical restraints and locked-door seclusion for assaulting staff. With mood stabilizers, neuroleptics, and benzodiazepines on a regular basis, he would gradually become less aggressive and intrusive.This progress was often interrupted by elopements, multiple 3-day notices that he would sign and then retract, and visits from his girlfriend, described as an untreated mentally ill woman who did not believe in psychiatric medication. She often encouraged Mr. A to discontinue his medications, and she assisted in his elopement from several hospitalizations. During these elopements, he would stop his medications and eventually return to the hospital floridly manic.It is notable that since the onset of his illness, Mr. A was noncompliant with outpatient treatment and medications until the last several years, when his compliance moderately improved. The seven hospitalizations over this time period were all for manic episodes (the majority with psychotic features) and precipitated by discontinuation of medications, or, once, in the context of terminating with a therapist. Mr. A admitted to becoming attached to his therapists but denied ever stopping medications in response to a change in therapists. When challenged with information from the medical record, he refused to discuss it further, saying, “They must have got it wrong.” The only clear reason Mr. A gave for stopping his medications was when he was encouraged to do so by his girlfriend. His medication regimen over the last 7 years has typically consisted of one to two mood stabilizers, an antipsychotic, and a long-acting benzodiazepine.The most striking feature of Mr. A’s course is that he had no reported episodes of self-injury from ages 29 to 44. This mutilation-free period ended, however, in October 1997, when he stuck a thumbtack in his right eyelid more than 50 times. The reported precipitant was that he had seen an attractive woman in the drugstore and felt guilty about his “lustful thoughts” about her. When asked about this incident, Mr. A replied, “The Bible says that if the eye offends you, then you must pluck it out.” Of note, just 3 days before this event, Mr. A’s psychiatrist of 2 years had terminated Mr. A’s therapy with him because he was changing jobs. Mr. A reported being “a little manic” at this time. He denied recreational drug use and, interestingly, gave variable reports about whether he was having command hallucinations at the time to enucleate himself.Notably, Mr. A’s two episodes of serious self-injury were quite different. They were separated by a span of many years. His mood was unclear in the first episode and was at least hypomanic in the second. He denied command hallucinations with the attempted auto-amputation (although it is probable that he had at least some level of psychosis at that time), and he likely had psychotic symptoms (possible command hallucinations) when he stuck the thumbtack in his eyelid. During the first episode he was not taking his psychiatric medication and had been out of treatment for several months; the second time he was taking his mood stabilizer and antipsychotic medication and was participating in outpatient treatment. Both episodes were not influenced by recreational drugs, and both were in the context of perceived abandonment: by his mother for being unsupportive and after the loss of the therapist. He reported that both episodes were impulsive and that he has never had a desire for self-injury (other than the suicide attempts and a head-shaving episode) at any other time.After the attempted self-enucleation, Mr. A was hospitalized for several months on an inpatient unit and then moved to the day hospital program at our facility, where his care was managed in conjunction with his new outpatient providers.
Family Psychiatric History
Mr. A’s second-oldest sister has a history of bipolar disorder and is the only family member, other than Mr. A, who has been diagnosed with a mental illness.
Social/Developmental History
What we know about Mr. A comes primarily from the records of his hospitalizations and through his self-report. Because his family has never been more than peripherally involved in his care, there has been no way to corroborate many of the details about his developmental history that he has provided.Mr. A was born in 1953, the youngest of six children. The three oldest children were single births; his mother’s fourth pregnancy resulted in nonidentical triplets, of whom Mr. A was the last born. The other two triplets were girls, one of whom died several days after birth due to complications stemming from prematurity.According to Mr. A, his biological father was a carpet layer who had numerous extramarital affairs. Mr. A’s father left the family soon after he learned of the triplets’ conception, and, although he continued to interact with the older children, he never had any contact with Mr. A, who was raised by his mother and maternal grandfather.Mr. A’s mother was a nurse and devout Catholic who was described as emotionally unavailable. Mr. A stated, “She told me that she loved me, but she never spent enough time with me because she was always playing cards.” He felt closer to his grandfather, with whom he engaged in activities such as playing checkers, gardening, and going to church. He described his grandfather as “very peaceful and calm” and as his primary parental figure. The records indicate that Mr. A was an active, outgoing child who did well academically in Catholic grammar school. However, he was also described as an extremely quiet child with a violent temper. With much discomfort, Mr. A himself revealed that his school years were extremely difficult because he had very few friends and was frequently picked on because he was short.His grandfather died when Mr. A was 10 years old, of what Mr. A described as “old age.” Mr. A’s mother soon married a divorced alcoholic who adopted both Mr. A and his triplet sister. When asked about the impact these events had on him, Mr. A quickly became anxious and disorganized and terminated the interview.The relationship between Mr. A and his stepfather was tumultuous. Mr. A recalled one incident when he was 10 years old when his stepfather literally dragged him out of a Boy Scout meeting by his hair because Mr. A had not done the dishes yet.During his high school years, the fighting between Mr. A and his stepfather increased. His stepfather would loudly and frequently belittle Mr. A about his lack of masculinity and the ever-growing length of his hair. Mr. A recalled one tirade in which his stepfather shouted, “It is bad enough that I have to look at your god-damn hair every day, but do I have to do it at the dinner table while I am trying to eat?” After making this statement, the stepfather suffered a nonfatal heart attack and was rushed to the hospital.During his last 2 years in high school, Mr. A began to use marijuana and LSD on a regular basis. Although he would continue to use drugs intermittently throughout his life, he reported that he was sober at the time of his self-injurious behavior.After graduation from high school, Mr. A attended a state university on the East Coast where he majored in biomedical research. After a year and a half year there, he reports that he discovered that his roommate, a bowling teammate and friend, was homosexual. This, coupled with the fact that his grades were suffering because he was working long hours at a fast-food restaurant, led Mr. A to transfer to a less rigorous college.He did well academically at the new college, despite substantial marijuana use, frequently smoking up to 10 joints daily. He eventually graduated summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Science degree in business administration. He described these college years as the best in his life “because marijuana gave me a lot of friends.”After graduation from college, Mr. A worked for a year in a nursing home, where he met and soon became engaged to an environmental services co-worker. They ended up moving to a large city in New England, where he began to work long hours at a fast-food restaurant. It was soon after his promotion to supervisor in the restaurant and his breakup with his fiancée that he had the first of his 20 psychiatric admissions.
Treatment Course
During his day hospitalization, Mr. A continued a regimen of risperidone, divalproex, clonazepam, and benztropine mesylate. Despite his medication compliance, he was hypomanic for substantial periods of time. This was manifested by intermittent pressured speech, irritability, grandiosity (planning to launch a singing career or run for lieutenant governor), and hyperreligiosity (with frequent references to, and literal interpretations of, Biblical passages regarding sex, sinning, guilt, and punishment). When discussing religious themes, family, sexuality, and his history of self-mutilation, Mr. A frequently became anxious and disorganized.He was an active participant in our Life Skills Track, which is composed of groups that focus on interpersonal skills and reintegration into the community. Although he complied with the program, he also frequently requested discharge. The treatment team encouraged a slower pace of transition out of the day hospital, to which he reluctantly agreed. As part of his transition, he worked part-time in the hospital gift shop and attended a community drop-in program. His insight and judgment remained poor, as evidenced by his goal to move to Oregon and grow marijuana.During this admission he had no episodes of self-injury, but he shaved his head shortly after the case conference. When questioned by staff, he admitted that he was concerned about his “lustful thoughts” and had been thinking of poking his eye out again. He agreed to a voluntary admission to a locked psychiatric unit in the area.
Mental Status Examination During Dr. Tsuang’s Interview
Mr. A was a short, centrally obese, mildly disheveled white man with a right arm hook prosthesis. He was pleasant and cooperative but mildly anxious during the interview. He had a notable coarse, bilateral resting hand tremor and right foot tremor that decreased with intention (this condition has been documented for many years). When questioned about sensitive topics (family, self-injury), his speech became mildly pressured but interruptible. His mood was “depressed,” and his affect was mildly euphoric at times. When anxious, he became circumstantial and tangential, with mild disorganization and loosening of associations. He denied active or passive suicidal ideation, homicidal ideation, paranoid ideation, and auditory or visual hallucinations. He had a notable lack of insight into his illness.
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