Wilson disease and psychiatric symptoms: A brief case report
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Guerrero Jiménez, Margarita; Carrillo de Albornoz Calahorro, Carmen Maura; Gutiérrez Rojas, LuisEditorial
BMJ
Date
2019Referencia bibliográfica
Guerrero-Jiménez M, Carrillo de Albornoz Calahorro CM, Gutierrez Rojas L. Wilson disease and psychiatric symptoms: A brief case report. General Psychiatry 2019;32:e100066 [doi: 10.1136/gpsych-2019-100066]
Abstract
Wilson disease (WD) is an uncommon recessive
genetic disorder affecting copper metabolism. Cardiac,
neurological, hepatic and renal manifestations are well
defined, nevertheless approximately 30% of patients
debut with neuropsychiatric symptoms. These psychiatric
alterations resulting from the accumulation of this heavy
metal in the basal ganglia are some how less specific. We
present a short review of psychiatric symptoms of WD and
describe a case of a 37-year-old woman diagnosed with
WD who presented neuropsychiatric symptoms and had
a consequent delay in diagnosis and causal treatment.
Patients who develop WD starting with a predominance
of neuropsychiatric symptoms tend to manifest hepatic
symptoms later, therefore have a longer delay of diagnosis
and a poorer outcome than patients with hepatic
symptoms. An early diagnosis of WD can avoid irreversible
neurological damage.