Which of the following statements accurately describes dissociative fugue

Disturbance of Memory

Femi Oyebode MBBS, MD, PhD, FRCPsych, in Sims' Symptoms in the Mind: Textbook of Descriptive Psychopathology, 2018

Dissociative Fugue

The symptoms pertaining to dissociative (conversion) disorders in theInternational Classification of Diseases (10th revision [ICD-10];World Health Organization, 1992) are of two types: conversion and dissociation. In dissociation, there is a narrowing of the field of consciousness, with subsequent amnesia for the episode. In many ways, dissociative symptoms represent a layman's impression of ‘madness’. In dissociative fugue states, there is narrowing of consciousness, wandering away from normal surroundings and subsequent amnesia. It involves loss of all autobiographical memories including identity. The person appears to be in good contact with his environment and usually behaves appropriately, maintaining basic self-care, although he sometimes displays disinhibition. There is quite often loss of identity or assumption of another, false identity. The duration of the episode can be very variable, from a few hours to several weeks, and the subject may travel considerable distances. A citizen of Birmingham, United Kingdom, described a state in which he ‘came to’ in a city he did not recognize and where people were speaking French. As he walked about the streets, he found he was near an airport terminal and, to his surprise, he discovered that he was in Montreal. Germane to his adventure was the history of a catastrophic row and the breakdown of his marriage just before he took off. Thus the features of dissociative fugue are dissociative amnesia, purposeful travel beyond the usual everyday range and maintenance of basic self-care (World Health Organization, 1992).

The predisposing factors include (a) precipitating stress resulting from relationship, marital or financial problems; (b) depressed mood including suicidal thoughts and (c) a past history of transient organic amnesia (McKay and Kopelman, 2009).

Loss of memory

C W M Whitty, in Contemporary Neurology, 1984

Psychogenic amnesia

Psychogenic fugues may be recurrent in susceptible persons. However, the diagnosis may present difficulties in the first attack or when, as is usual, the history is unknown. It has often to be made by excluding alternatives of which the main two are epilepsy and TGA. A hysterical state associated with head injury or occurring during an acute alcoholic blackout may also present problems. Frequently medicolegal implications underline the importance of an accurate diagnosis.

The general setting of the psychogenic fugue may afford clues. The way in which it is brought to medical attention may be informative. A knowledge of personal identity is usually denied. Inconsistencies of statement and behaviour may be noted. Wandering from the usual habitat is common. An unusual indifference to the situation or a marked but superficial emotional reaction such as fear or depression may be notable. While not of themselves diagnostic, these are not common features in epilepsy or TGA. Where there is evidence of trauma the discrepancy between its severity and the amnesic state may be relevant, but in this setting and that of apparent acute transient alcoholic blackout a period of hospital observation is probably unavoidable.

Over recent years the diagnostic problem has been complicated by the association of self-administered drugs. The commonly used soft drugs—amphetamine, varieties of barbiturates, tranquillizers, cannabis, and LSD—are all known to produce in some subjects loss or distortions of memory. They are also more commonly used by those with the psychopathic traits and emotional instabilities that appear to predispose to psychogenic fugues. Therefore, if this diagnosis is being considered it is necessary to look for evidence of these possible concomitants.

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Dissociative Disorders

Fred F. Ferri MD, FACP, in Ferri's Clinical Advisor 2022, 2022

Physical Findings & Clinical Presentation

Dissociative amnesia (DA): Loss of autobiographic memory for previous experiences or before a certain point in time. Types of DA include:

1.

Localized amnesia: Inability to recall a specific (traumatic) period of time.

2.

Selective amnesia: Inability to recall parts, but not all, of a specific period of time.

3.

Systematized amnesia: Inability to recall categorical autobiographical memories, but not memory loss in chronologic order such as with localized amnesia.

4.

Continuous amnesia: Anterograde loss of memory, or inability to remember successive events as they occurred.

5.

Generalized (global) amnesia: Inability to recall one’s whole life, including personal details.

6.

Thematic amnesia (as seen in DID and dissociative disorders not otherwise specified [DDNOS]): As identity states change, ability to recall specific periods of time is altered.

Dissociative fugue (DF): DF carries the same characteristics as DA, with the distinguishing feature of sudden and unplanned purposeful travel away from one’s home.

Dissociative identity disorder (DID): Formerly referred to asmultiple personality disorder (MPD), patients appear to possess two (or more) distinct identities or personality states, associated with the patient’s consciousness, perception, thoughts, and actions.

Depersonalization disorder (DPD): Also known asderealization disorder, DPD is a state in which patients believe that they have been altered in some way or that they are no longer real. Features include persistent and recurring experiences of feeling detached from one’s own body and mental processes (i.e., one observing oneself as an outsider). Reality testing remains intact.

Dissociative disorders not otherwise specified (DDNOS): Some dissociative symptoms of varying degrees but not meeting criteria for a distinct diagnosis.

Dissociation*

J.R. Maldonado, in Encyclopedia of Stress (Second Edition), 2007

Dissociative Fugue (Psychogenic Fugue)

Dissociative fugue is characterized by the sudden, unexpected travel away from home or one's customary place of daily activities, with inability to recall some or all of one's past. As in the previous disorder, amnesia is present, causing a sense of confusion about personal identity. On occasion, patients assume a new identity.

In contrast to dissociative amnesia cases, patients suffering from fugue states appear normal to the lay observer. Patients usually exhibit no signs of psychopathology or cognitive deficit. Fugue patients differ from those with dissociative amnesia in that the former are usually unaware of their amnesia. Only upon resumption of their former identities do they recall past memories, at which time they usually become amnestic for experiences during the fugue episode. Often, patients suffering from fugue states take on an entirely new (and often unrelated) identity and occupation. In contrast to patients suffering from DID, in fugue states the old and new identities do not alternate.

Not much is known regarding the etiology of this disorder. Nevertheless, the underlying motivating factor appears to be a desire to withdraw from emotionally painful experiences. Clinical data suggest that predisposing factors include extreme psychosocial stress such as war or natural and man-made disasters, personal and/or financial pressures or losses, heavy alcohol use, and intense and overwhelming stress such as assault or rape. The onset of some fugue episodes may occur during sleep or be associated with sleep deprivation.

As in cases of acute dissociative amnesia, the onset of the disorder is usually associated with a traumatic or overwhelming event accompanied by strong emotions such as depression, grief, suicidal or aggressive impulses, or shame. Dissociative fugue is the least understood dissociative disorder. This may be due to the fact that most of these patients do not present for treatment. Usually they do not come to the attention of medical personnel until they have recovered their identity and memory and return home. Typically, patients seek psychiatric attention once the fugue is over and they are seeking to recover their original identity or retrieve their memory for events that occurred during the fugue.

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Dissociative Disorders

Theodore A. Stern MD, in Massachusetts General Hospital Comprehensive Clinical Psychiatry, 2016

Dissociative Disorder Not Otherwise Specified

This category is reserved for presentations in which the predominant feature is dissociation without meeting criteria for any specific dissociative disorder. (Box 35-8 lists the DSM-IV4 criteria of this condition and exclusions to it.Box 35-9 lists the DSM-5 update for this disorder Other Specified/Unspecified Dissociative Disorders.) Examples of dissociative disorder NOS vary widely. Additionally, symptoms that result from torture or brainwashing may be classified in this category. Ganser's syndrome (sometimes called “prison psychosis”) is classified as a dissociative disorder NOS. It is characterized by the provision of approximate answers: that is, offering half-correct answers to simple inquiries, such as answering “Five” to the question, “What is two plus two?” The correct set of the response is given, but the answer is inaccurate. Ganser's syndrome is often reported in incarcerated populations.31–33

Finally, certain culture-bound syndromes (such asamok in Indonesia orlatah in Malaysia) are often characterized by dissociation and sometimes by violence. These syndromes have often been characterized as dissociative disorder NOS.

Reenactment Techniques*

N. Wong, in Encyclopedia of Stress (Second Edition), 2007

Hypnosis

This modality is especially useful in the reenactment of stressful or traumatic situations causing dissociative amnesia and dissociative fugue with memory loss. Hypnosis is best utilized to explore the events that precipitated the fugue or amnesia. When employing this technique, clinicians should suggest to the hypnotized patients that they may choose to forget some or even all of what was remembered or reenacted in the trance state to prevent them from being overwhelmed by the emergence of unconscious material that the patients are not yet ready to handle. The recaptured or selectively shared data from patients are then dealt with in the fully conscious state to help them cope with the underlying conflicts. It is generally advisable to employ other conscious methods before resorting to the use of hypnosis or chemical means to bring about a reenactment of a traumatic situation. While hypnosis is usually safe to use with most healthy individuals, the therapist or treater should exercise the same degree of caution in probing unconscious material in psychotherapy.

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CLINICAL ASSESSMENT OF MENTAL STATUS

Dennis Velakoulis, Mark Walterfang, in Neurology and Clinical Neuroscience, 2007

Examination of Attention and Orientation

Testing of orientation to time is more sensitive to cerebral dysfunction than testing of orientation to place, and impaired orientation to person should raise the possibility of a psychogenic fugue state. Successful completion of tests of orientation requires intact memory and expressive language; that is, these are not “pure” tests of attention. When time orientation is tested, orientation to the approximate time of day (within 1 hour), should be assessed as well as that to the day of the week, month, and year, and is perhaps the most reliable and sensitive. Disorientation as to the exact date has a very high base rate in the normal population and is rarely clinically useful. Marked disorientation to time is most common in patients with delirium or Korsakoff's amnesia. Orientation is often preserved in early dementia.

Attention has traditionally been tested by serial subtraction tasks and reverse spelling of words, such the serial sevens and “WORLD” backwards tasks in the MMSE. Such tasks are dependent on working memory, as well as on calculation and spelling, respectively, both of which are strongly related to educational background and both of which may be disrupted by focal lesions that do not otherwise impair attention.123 Reciting an overlearned sequence such as days of the week or months of the year in reverse order requires sustained attention and intact working memory; this test is very sensitive to disturbance of attentional processes and is generally understood across cultures and languages. Repeating a spoken sequence of digits, starting with two digits and increasing the length of the sequence with each correct attempt, is also a sensitive marker of attention, particularly when the patient needs to repeat the sequence in reverse, which is more difficult and places a greater load on working memory. Most subjects correctly complete 7 ± 2 digits forward and 5 ± 1 in reverse. Digit span testing depends on intact working memory, the frontal lobe–mediated brief store of visual or auditory information in current consciousness (e.g., remembering a telephone number before writing it down). Continuous performance tasks, which require the patient to respond when a particular stimulus is presented (e.g., the letter “A” in a list of random letters read by the examiner9) are minimally dependent on working memory but are good measures of sustained, directed attention. Finally, it is important for the clinician to be aware that attentional impairment may impair performance in other parts of the cognitive examination. If attention is markedly impaired, poor results on testing in other domains may not necessarily indicate that function in those domains is also impaired (Table 1-3).

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Dissociative disorders

Jahangir Moini, ... Anthony LoGalbo, in Global Emergency of Mental Disorders, 2021

Prognosis

For dissociative amnesia, memories sometimes return quickly, such as when the patient is taken out of the stressful or traumatic situation. Other times, amnesia—often if accompanied by dissociative fugue—will persist for a long time. The capacity for dissociation may decrease as the patient ages. Most patients recover the missing memories, and the amnesia usually resolves, though some can never reconstruct their missing memories. Prognosis is basically determined by the patient’s life circumstances—mostly the conflicts and stressors that are related to amnesia—and the patient’s overall level of psychological adjustment.

Significant point

Diagnosis of dissociative amnesia is very important in the criminal justice system, because defense attorneys often claim that their clients committed a crime while in a state of amnesia. There is a positive link with the amount of annual “amnesia” cases and the severity of crimes that are committed. Dissociative amnesia and crime are often linked to excessive alcohol use.

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Parasomnias

Richard B. Berry MD, in Fundamentals of Sleep Medicine, 2012

The ICSD-21 states “sleep-related dissociative disorders (SRDD) emerge throughout the sleep period during well-established EEG wakefulness, either at transition from wakefulness to sleep or within several minutes after awakening from stage N1, N2, or R” (Box 28–17). An important distinction from other parasomnias is that whereas typical parasomnias tend to emerge almost simultaneously with arousal, the SRDDs emerge from well-established wakefulness.

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV), states that “a dissociative disorder is characterized by a disruption in the usually integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, or perception of the environment.”47 An SRDD would include dissociative behavior that occurred out of wakefulness during the sleep period in which there was an impairment of identity, memory, or state of consciousness.

Types of Dissociative Disorders Associated with Sleep

There are five diagnostic categories of DDs in DSM-IV47 including (1) dissociative identity disorder (formerly multiple personality disorder), (2) dissociative fugue, (3) dissociative amnesia, (4) depersonalization disorder, and (5) dissociative disorder not otherwise specified (DD NOS). Of these, three are considered SRDD: dissociative identity disorder, dissociative fugue, and DD NOS. Most but not all patients with SRDD have both daytime DD episodes as well as previous episodes of SRDD.1,48

Dissociative Identity Disorder

In dissociative identity disorder, a person displays multiple identities and personalities each with its own pattern of perceiving and integrating with the environment. A minimum of two personalities is required.

Dissociative Fugue State

The dissociative fugue state is characterized by reversible amnesia for personal identity and memories usually lasting hours to days. A dissociative fugue state usually involves unplanned travel or wandering and is sometimes associated with establishment of a new identity. After the episode, prior memories return but there is amnesia for the fugue episode.

Dissociative Disorder Not Otherwise Specified

The classification DD NOS is used for a DD that does not fit the criteria for a specific DD.

Epidemiology

SRDD are more common in females.1 In patients with SRDD, the age of onset is usually from childhood to middle adulthood. In one study of 100 consecutive patients referred to a sleep disorders clinic, 7% were diagnosed with SRDDs.6 The majority of patients with SRDDs have a history of physical or sexual trauma/abuse.

Diagnosis of SRDD

The ICSD-2 diagnostic criteria are listed in Box 28–17 and important facts are displayed in Box 28–18.

Treatment of SRDDs

The treatment of SRDD involves the treatment of the underling DD. Psychotherapy is the main treatment for DD with the goal of encouraging communication of conflicts and increased insight. The overall goal is to help the individual come to terms with the stress or trauma that triggered the DD.

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A.J. Genchi, in Reference Module in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Psychology, 2017

Abstract

Sleep-related dissociative disorders are defined as dissociative disorders that can arise throughout the sleep period during well-established wakefulness. Nocturnal behaviors correspond to those observed in dissociative disorders, such as two or more distinct personality states or dissociative amnesia with dissociative fugue. Sleep-related dissociative disorders are more frequent in females from adolescence to middle adulthood. Most of patients have a past history of childhood maltreatment and past or current history of psychiatric morbidity. Although diagnosis may be established through clinical assessment, polysomnographic recording of a dissociative episode demonstrates it emerges from electroencephalographic wakefulness. The course is usually chronic with a poor response to pharmacologic and psychotherapeutic treatments.

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What is dissociative fugue?

Dissociative fugue is a psychiatric disorder characterized by amnesia coupled with sudden unexpected travel away from the individual's usual surroundings and denial of all memory of his or her whereabouts during the period of wandering.

Which of the following describes dissociative disorders?

Dissociative disorders are mental disorders that involve experiencing a disconnection and lack of continuity between thoughts, memories, surroundings, actions and identity.

What is a fugue state?

A dissociative fugue is a temporary state where a person has memory loss (amnesia) and ends up in an unexpected place. People with this symptom can't remember who they are or details about their past. Other names for this include a "fugue” or a “fugue state.”

What is the primary goal in therapy with patients who have dissociative identity disorder?

The goals of treatment for dissociative disorders are to help the patient safely recall and process painful memories, develop coping skills, and, in the case of dissociative identity disorder, to integrate the different identities into one functional person.