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When the Body Attacks the Mind (www.theatlantic.com)

 

One day in February 2009, a 13-year-old boy named Sasha Egger started thinking that people were coming to hurt his family. His mother, Helen, watched with mounting panic that evening as her previously healthy son forgot the rules to Uno, his favorite card game, while playing it. She began making frantic phone calls the next morning. By then, Sasha was shuffling aimlessly around the yard, shredding paper and stuffing it in his pockets. “He looked like an old person with dementia,” Helen later told me.

That afternoon, Sasha was admitted to the hospital, where he saw a series of specialists. One thought Sasha might have bipolar disorder and put him on antipsychotics, but the drugs didn’t help. Helen, a child psychiatrist at Duke University, knew that psychiatric conditions develop gradually. Sasha’s symptoms had appeared almost overnight, and some of them—including dilated pupils and slurred speech—suggested not mental illness but neurological dysfunction. When she and her husband, Daniel, raised these issues, though, one doctor seemed to think they were in denial.

So many questions about the role of inflammation and the body-mind connection.

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Corinna:

You wrote:

"Out of the blue," somehow never is if you ask the right questions.

I'll be thinking about this line all day.

It's so true.

Cissy

Last edited by Jane Stevens

75% of rare disease patients get a mental health diagnoses first. If you ruled out all trauma, nutrition, genetic, social, creative maladjustment, spiritual emergency and other sources of misdiagnosis, there's probably no "mental illness" left. A huge percentage of educated advocates question the validity of all diagnoses.

 

"Out of the blue," somehow never is if you ask the right questions.

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