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The Bizarre Case Of Cotard's Syndrome

When you don‘t get a lot of sleep, you sometimes feel like a zombie all day.

Some people believe that they are, in fact, the walking dead. Cotard‘s Syndrome is a rare condition where patients sincerely believe that they‘ve died.

Thanks to a range of possible delusions, a patient‘s relationship with their body completely changes. Some patients believe they‘re a corpse; others think that their organs are rotting; sometimes, a patient might think that their body doesn‘t even exist at all. And that‘s just the physical body.

Some individuals with Cotard‘s Syndrome believe that their soul is doomed to hell, or they experience delusions of immortality.

This condition can be very dangerous. If you don‘t think your body really exists, it must be hard to take care of it. If I didn‘t think I were alive, or I thought my organs were rotting or gone, I wouldn‘t even want to eat.

This was the fate of Mademoiselle X, a patient of French neurologist Jules Cotard in 1880. Mademoiselle X believed that many of her organs were missing, and as a result she was sure she didn‘t need food. Cotard witnessed her death by starvation, and his report of the case led to widespread recognition of the syndrome. Doctors today are still researching how to prevent, and treat, the condition.

Sources And Further Reading

  • Griffiths, M. D. Dead Strange: A beginner‘s guide to Cotard‘s Syndrome. Psychology Today, October 17, 2014.
  • Ruminjo, A., & Mekinulov, B. (2008). A Case Report of Cotard‘s Syndrome. Psychiatry (Edgemont). 5 (6), 28-29.
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