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Letter
Published Online: 1 August 2001

Canary Capgras

Publication: The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
SIR: Capgras syndrome has been defined as the delusional belief in the existence of “doubles” of significant people in a patient's life.1 We report the case of a socially isolated woman who felt her canary was replaced by a duplicate.

Case Report

Mrs. G., a 67-year-old woman, was admitted for the first time to a psychiatric hospital for late paraphrenia. On admission she reported delusions of impoverishment and the feeling of being sexually harassed by various men in public. She had been a widow for 11 years, had no children, and lived on her own with very few social contacts. Furthermore, she suffered from concerns that her canary was alone at home. She was delighted with the suggestion that the bird be transferred to the ward. However, during the first two days she repeatedly asserted that the canary in the cage was not her canary and reported that the bird looked exactly like her canary, but was in fact a duplicate. There were otherwise no misidentifications of persons or objects. The paranoid symptoms were rapidly controlled by 3 mg po haloperidol. A CT scan of the brain and an EEG revealed no abnormalities.

Comment

Delusions of substitutions of people and objects are well recognized in psychiatric illnesses.2 Capgras syndrome, first described by Capgras and Reboul-Lacheaux,3 is known to appear mainly in paranoid psychosis, as in the original description, or in organic brain syndromes including Alzheimer's disease and traumatic brain injury. There are, however, very few cases of Capgras syndrome involving animals.4 In Capgras syndrome, a key figure in the patient's life is believed to be replaced by a “double” or imposter. Usually the misidentification involves a person with whom the patient has an “intense affective sentiment.”1 Our patient had no close person in her own environment who fulfilled this role. Instead, her canary had become her closest living companion. Social isolation and loneliness in old age has long been regarded as a factor in the etiology of late paraphrenia.5 In the case of Mrs. G., the lack of personal contact in her social environment may have identified her pet canary as the focus for her delusion.

References

1.
Berson RJ: Capgras syndrome. Am J Psychiatry 1983; 140:969-978
2.
Kimura S: Review of 106 cases with the syndrome of Capgras. References of Psychiatry 1986; 164:121-130
3.
Capgras J, Reboul-Lacheaux J: L'illusion des “sosies” dans un délire systematisé chronique [Illusion of doubles in a chronic systematized delusion]. Bulletin de la Société Clinique de Médicine Mentale 1923; 11:6-16
4.
Somerfield D: Capgras syndrome and animals. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 1999; 14:892-894
5.
Janzarik W: Über das Kontaktmangelparanoid des höheren Lebensalters und den Symptomcharakter schizophrenen Krankseins [Isolation paranoia and schizophrenic symptomatology in elderly persons]. Nervenartz 1973; 44:515-526

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
Go to The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
Pages: 429
PubMed: 11514660

History

Published online: 1 August 2001
Published in print: August 2001

Authors

Affiliations

Alexander sler, M.D.
Department of Neurology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universität Frankfurt, Germany
Erich Seifritz, M.D.
Psychiatric University Clinic, Kantonsspital Basel, Switzerland

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