Erotomania

Erotomania, also known as de Clérambault's Syndrome,[1] is a relatively uncommon paranoid condition that is characterized by an individual's delusions of another person being infatuated with them.[2] It is listed in the DSM-5 as a subtype of a delusional disorder.[3] Commonly, the onset of erotomania is sudden, and the course is chronic.[4]

Erotomania
M.S.P. "Female patient suffering from erotomania," from Alexander Morison's The Physiognomy of Mental Diseases
SpecialtyPsychiatry Edit this on Wikidata
SymptomsFalse attraction
DurationChronic

This disorder is most often seen (though not exclusively) in female patients who are shy, dependent, and sexually inexperienced. The object of the delusion is typically a male who is unattainable due to high social or financial status, marriage, or lack of interest.[2][4] The object of obsession may also be imaginary, deceased, or someone the patient has never met. Delusions of reference are common, as the erotomanic individual often perceives that they are being sent messages from the secret admirer through innocuous events such as seeing license plates from specific states.[4]

Symptoms

Erotomania is more common in women, but may be more dangerous among men due to the increased risk of violent and stalker-like behaviors.[4]

The core symptom of erotomania is that the individual holds an unshakable belief that another person is secretly in love with them. In some cases, the person with the condition may believe several people at once are "secret admirers". Most commonly, the individual has delusions of being loved by an unattainable person who is usually an acquaintance or someone the person has never met. They may also experience other types of delusions concurrently with erotomania, such as delusions of reference, wherein the perceived admirer secretly communicates their love by subtle methods such as body posture, arrangement of household objects, colors, numbers, license plates on cars from specific states and other seemingly innocuous actsor, if the person is a public figure, through clues in the media such as coded social media posts and meaningful clothing choices. Some delusions may be extreme such as the conception, birth, and kidnapping of children that never existed or the belief that the individual was predestined or chosen by God to be with the object of their obsession. The delusional objects may be replaced by others over time, and some may be chronic in fixed forms.[4] Denial is characteristic with this disorder as the patients do not accept the fact that their object of delusion may be married, unavailable, or uninterested. The phantom lover may also be imaginary or deceased.

Erotomania has two forms: primary and secondary. Primary erotomania is also commonly referred to as de Clerambault's syndrome and Old Maid's Insanity[5] and it exists alone without comorbidities, has a sudden onset and a chronic outcome.[4] The secondary form is found along with mental disorders like paranoid schizophrenia, often includes persecutory delusions, hallucinations, and grandiose ideas, and has a more gradual onset.[4] Patients with a "fixed" condition are more seriously ill with constant delusions and are less responsive to treatment. These individuals are usually timid, dependent women that are often sexually or socially inexperienced.[4] In those with a more mild, recurrent condition, delusions are shorter-lived and the disorder can exist undetected by others for years.[5] Problematic behaviors include actions like calling and texting, sending letters and unwanted gifts, persistent internet harassment via social media and email, making unannounced house visits, contacting or attempting to contact the object's friends, family or co-workers and other persistent stalking behaviors.[4]

Cause

Erotomania may present as a primary mental disorder, or as a symptom of another psychiatric illness. With secondary erotomania, the erotomanic delusions are due to other mental disorders such as bipolar I disorder or schizophrenia. Symptoms may also be precipitated by alcoholism, substance abuse (including cannabis use) and the use of antidepressants.[6] There may be a potential genetic component involved as family histories of first degree relatives (parents, siblings) with histories of psychiatric disorders and/or dementia are common. The disorder also has behavioral similarities to early onset Alzheimer's disease (mood swings, poor judgement, confusion, hallucinations). Sigmund Freud explained erotomania as a defense mechanism to ward off homosexual impulses which can lead to strong feelings of paranoia, denial, displacement and projection. Similarly, it has been explained as a way to cope with severe loneliness or ego deficit following a major loss.[4] Erotomania may also be linked to unsatiated urges dealing with homosexuality or narcissism.[5] Some research shows brain abnormalities occurring in patients with erotomania such as heightened temporal lobe asymmetry and greater volumes of lateral ventricles than those with no mental disorders.[5]

Treatment

Prognosis differs from person to person, and the ideal treatment is not completely understood. Treatment for this disorder gains the best results when tailored specifically for each individual. To date, the mainline pharmacological treatments have been pimozide (a typical antipsychotic which was also approved for treating Tourette's Syndrome),[4][5] and atypical antipsychotics like risperidone and clozapine.[4][5] Non-pharmacologic treatments that have shown some degree of efficacy are electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), supportive psychotherapy, family and environment therapy,[4] rehousing, risk management and treating underlying disorders in cases of secondary erotomania.[5] ECT may provide temporary remission of delusional beliefs; antipsychotics help attenuate delusions and reduce agitation or associated dangerous behaviors, and SSRIs may be used to treat secondary depression.[4] In delusional disorder there is some evidence that pimozide has superior efficacy compared with other antipsychotics. Psychosocial psychiatric interventions can enhance the quality of life through allowing some social functioning, and treating comorbid disorders is a priority for secondary erotomania.[5] Family therapy, adjustment of socio-environmental factors, and replacing delusions with something positive may be beneficial to all. In most cases, harsh confrontation should be avoided.[4] Structured risk assessment helps to manage risky behaviors in those individuals more likely to engage in actions that include violence, stalking, and crime.[5] For particularly troublesome cases, neuroleptics and enforced separation may be moderately effective.[2]

History

Gaëtan Gatian de Clérambault, French psychiatrist from whom Erotomania gets its other name, de Clérambault's Syndrome.

Early references to the condition can be found in the work of Hippocrates, Freud (1911), French psychiatrist Gaëtan Gatian de Clérambault (1942),[4] Erasistratus, Plutarch and Galen. Parisian physician, Bartholomy Pardoux (1545-1611) covered the topics of nymphomania and erotomania.[4] In 1623, erotomania was referred to in a treatise by Jacques Ferrand[4] (Maladie d'amour ou Mélancolie érotique) and has been called "erotic paranoia" and "erotic self-referent delusion" until the common usage of the terms erotomania and de Clérambault's syndrome. In 1971 and 1977, M.V. Seeman referred to the disorder as "phantom lover syndrome" and "psychotic erotic transference reaction and delusional loving".[4] Emil Kraepelin and Bernard also wrote of erotomania and more recently, Winokur, Kendler, and Munro have contributed to knowledge on the disorder.[5]

G. E. Berrios and N. Kennedy outlined in 'Erotomania: a conceptual history' (2002)[7] several periods of history through which the definition of erotomania has changed considerably:

  • Classical times – early eighteenth century: General disease caused by unrequited love
  • Early eighteenth-beginning of nineteenth century: Practise of excess physical love (akin to nymphomania or satyriasis)
  • Early nineteenth century – beginning twentieth century: Unrequited love as a form of mental disease
  • Early twentieth century – present: Delusional belief of "being loved by someone else"

In one case, erotomania was reported in a patient who had undergone surgery for a ruptured cerebral aneurysm.[8]

Well-known cases

In his paper that described the syndrome, de Clérambault referenced a patient he had counselled who was obsessed with British monarch George V.[9] She had stood outside Buckingham Palace for hours at a time, believing that the king was communicating his desire for her by moving the curtains.[9] Parallels were drawn between this and a 2011 case where the body of a homeless American man was found on a secluded island in St James Park, within sight of Buckingham Palace. The man had sent hundreds of "strange and offensive" packages to Queen Elizabeth II over the previous fifteen years.[9]

The attempted assassination of United States president Ronald Reagan by John Hinckley Jr. has been reported to have been driven by an erotomaniac fixation on actress Jodie Foster, whom Hinckley was attempting to impress.

Late-night TV entertainer David Letterman and former astronaut Story Musgrave were both stalked by Margaret Mary Ray, who had erotomania.[9]

Michael David Barrett allegedly had erotomania, stalking ESPN correspondent Erin Andrews across the country, trying to see her and taking lewd videos.[9]

Many cases of obsession or stalking can be linked to erotomania but do not always necessarily go hand in hand.

In media

  • Black Narcissus (1947) Sister Ruth exhibits erotomania towards Mr Dean
  • Girls Town (1959)
  • Fatal Attraction (1987)
  • Nurse Betty (2000)
  • A main character in the American TV series Orange Is the New Black, Lorna Morello, exhibits erotomanic behavior towards a man to whom she deludedly believes herself to be engaged
  • He Loves Me... He Loves Me Not (2002)
  • A 2011 episode (Series 5, Episode 3) of the British TV series Lewis features a character with erotomania, referred to in the show as de Clérambault's syndrome
  • Enduring Love (1997)
  • Criminal Minds Season 1, Episode 5: "Broken Mirror"
  • Doc Martin Season 6, Episode 3: The Tameness of a Wolf
  • Law & Order Season 3, Episode 18: “Animal Instinct”
  • A 2019 episode (Series 1, Episode 2) of the British-Austrian series Vienna Blood features a character who displays symptoms of de Clérambault's syndrome (although correctly not described as such, since the programme is set in 1907, 14 years before de Clérambault himself described the syndrome)
  • You (TV series) Season 4, Episode 6 & 8
  • In Chapter VIII of The Great Gatsby, the title character expresses the view that Daisy, his obsession, might, at most, have loved her husband “just for a minute, when they were first married” but that she loved him, Gatsby, “more even then.”

See also

Further reading

  • Remington GJ, Jeffries JJ (1994). "Erotomanic delusions and electroconvulsive therapy: a case series". J Clin Psychiatry. 55 (7): 306–8. PMID 8071292.
  • Anderson CA, Camp J, Filley CM (1998). "Erotomania after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage: case report and literature review". J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 10 (3): 330–7. doi:10.1176/jnp.10.3.330. PMID 9706541.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Frank Bruni, Behind the Jokes, a Life Of Pain and Delusion; For Letterman Stalker, Mental Illness Was Family Curse and Scarring Legacy, New York Times, November 22, 1998
  • Foster, David & Levinson, Arlene. Suicide on a railroad track ends a celebrity-stalker's inner agony Archived 2011-06-14 at the Wayback Machine., Associated Press, October 11, 1998
  • Berrios GE, Kennedy N (2002). "Erotomania: a conceptual history". Hist Psychiatry. 13 (52): 381–400. doi:10.1177/0957154X0201305202. PMID 12638595. S2CID 24663481.
  • Helen K. Gediman (14 December 2016). Stalker, Hacker, Voyeur, Spy: A Psychoanalytic Study of Erotomania, Voyeurism, Surveillance, and Invasions of Privacy. Karnac Books. pp. 21–34. ISBN 978-1-78181-706-3.

References

Notes

  1. Valadas, Maria Teresa Tavares Rodrigues Tomaz; Eduarda Abrantes Bravo, Lucilia (23 October 2020). "De Clérambault's syndrome revisited: a case report of Erotomania in a male". BMC Psychiatry. 20 (1): Article number 516. doi:10.1186/s12888-020-02921-5. PMC 7585286. PMID 33097035.
  2. Segal, J.H. (1989). "Erotomania revisited: From Kraepelin to DSM-III-R". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 146 (10): 1261–1266. doi:10.1176/ajp.146.10.1261. PMID 2675641.
  3. Oliveira, C.; Alves, S.; Ferreira, C.; Agostinho, C.; Avelino, M.J. (2016). "Erotomania-A review of De Clerambault's Syndrome". The Journal of the European Psychiatric Association. 33: 664.
  4. Jordan, H.W.; Lockert, E.W.; Johnson-Warren, M.; Cabell, C.; Cooke, T.; Greer, W.; Howe, G. (2006). "Erotomania revisisted: Thirty-four years later". Journal of the National Medical Association. 98 (5): 787–793. PMC 2569288. PMID 16749657.
  5. Kelly, B.D. (2005). "Erotomania: Epidemiology and management". CNS Drugs. 19 (8): 657–669. doi:10.2165/00023210-200519080-00002. PMID 16097848.
  6. Seeman, M.V. (2016). "Erotomania and recommendations for treatment". Psychiatric Quarterly. 87 (2): 355–364. doi:10.1007/s11126-015-9392-0. PMID 26442945. S2CID 13059293.
  7. Berrios GE, Kennedy N (2002). "Erotomania: a conceptual history". History of Psychiatry. 13 (52, pt4) (52 Pt 4): 381–400. doi:10.1177/0957154X0201305202. PMID 12638595. S2CID 24663481.
  8. Anderson, CA; Camp, J; Filley, C.M. (1998). "Erotomania after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage: case report and literature review". J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 10 (3): 330–337. doi:10.1176/jnp.10.3.330. PMID 9706541.
  9. McDonnell; Margaux; McPadden. (2013). "9 Stalkers That Make Us Glad We're Not Famous".

Bibliography

  • Anderson CA, Camp J, Filley CM (1998). "Erotomania after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage: case report and literature review". J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 10 (3): 330–70. doi:10.1176/jnp.10.3.330. PMID 9706541.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Berrios GE, Kennedy N (2002). "Erotomania: a conceptual history". History of Psychiatry. 13 (52): 381–400. doi:10.1177/0957154X0201305202. PMID 12638595. S2CID 24663481.
  • Helen K. Gediman (14 December 2016). Stalker, Hacker, Voyeur, Spy: A Psychoanalytic Study of Erotomania, Voyeurism, Surveillance, and Invasions of Privacy. Karnac Books. pp. 21–34. ISBN 978-1-78181-706-3.
  • Jordan H.W., Lockert E.W., Johnson-Warren M., Cabell C., Cooke T., Greer W., Howe G. (2006). "Erotomania revisisted: Thirty-four years later". Journal of the National Medical Association. 98 (5): 787–93. PMC 2569288. PMID 16749657.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Kelly B.D. (2005). "Erotomania: Epidemiology and management". CNS Drugs. 19 (8): 657–669. doi:10.2165/00023210-200519080-00002. PMID 16097848.
  • McDonnell, Margaux, and Mike McPadden. "9 Stalkers That Make Us Glad We're Not Famous." CrimeFeed, 12 Nov. 2013, crimefeed.com/2013/10/9-stalkers-that-make-us-glad-were-not-famous/.
  • Oliveira C., Alves S., Ferreira C., Agostinho C., Avelino M.J. (2016). "Erotomania-A review of De Clerambault's Syndrome". The Journal of the European Psychiatric Association. 33: S664.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Seeman M.V. (2016). "Erotomania and recommendations for treatment". Psychiatric Quarterly. 87 (2): 355–364. doi:10.1007/s11126-015-9392-0. PMID 26442945. S2CID 13059293.
  • Segal J.H. (1989). "Erotomania revisited: From Kraepelin to DSM-III-R". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 146 (10): 1261–6. doi:10.1176/ajp.146.10.1261. PMID 2675641.
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