• Acta Medica Port · Sep 2024

    Case Reports

    Bipolar Camouflage: A Cerebellar Cognitive Affective Syndrome Case Report.

    • Teresa Reynolds de Sousa, Miguel Schön, Pedro Alves, Filipa Novais, and Tiago Mendes.
    • Psychiatry and Mental Health Department. Unidade Local de Saúde Santa Maria. Lisbon. Portugal.
    • Acta Medica Port. 2024 Sep 2; 37 (9): 647651647-651.

    AbstractThe cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome is a neuropsychiatric syndrome composed of affective (anxiety, depression, euphoria, and emotional lability) and cognitive symptoms (executive, attentional, and visuospatial deficits) that was described in the 1990s. We present the case of a 49-year-old woman with a history of an acute neurological episode at the age of 28, after which she reported a change in personality, brief and alternating periods of depression, hypomania, and mixed episodes, and cognitive impairment that had a major impact on her personal and occupational level of functioning. She was initially diagnosed with bipolar disorder, but a clinical, neuropsychological, and imaging re-evaluation prompted a diagnostic reconsideration in favor of a cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome. This enabled therapeutical and prognostic refinement. Here, we discuss the diagnostic challenges of this syndrome and the implications that an accurate diagnosis has for patients.

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