GC: “n”
S: PBM – https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12011289?dopt=Abstract (last access: 17 October 2016); MDS – https://goo.gl/KOQa4s (last access: 17 October 2016); INDN – https://goo.gl/gTbMmI (last access: 17 October 2016).
N: 1. Cotard’s syndrome: eponymous created from Parisian neurologist.’s name Jules Cotard (1840-1889).
Dr. Jules Cotard (1840-1889) was a Parisian neurologist who first described the délire des négations.
- It is not classified under the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-V) but is recognised as a “disease of human health” in the International Classification of Diseases.
2. A rare mental illness can make the sufferer believe they are dead, partly dead or do not exist.
3. Cultural Interrelation:
– Reality:
- New Scientist conducted an interview with Graham, a man who suffered the Cotard’s Syndrome. The interview is called: Mindscapes: First interview with a dead man.
- French neurologist Jules Cotard identified the first case in the 1800s. He described a woman suffering from the condition as affirming “she has no brain, no nerves, no chest, no stomach, no intestines… only skin and bones of a decomposing body”.
– Fictional:
- It should be noted the Canadian film of 2012 Thanatomorphose by Éric Falardeau.
S: 1. PBM – https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12011289?dopt=Abstract (last access: 17 October 2016). 2. INDEP – https://goo.gl/Drou79 (last access: 25 October 2016). 3. MDS – https://goo.gl/KOQa4s (last access: 17 October 2016); INDN – https://goo.gl/gTbMmI (last access: 17 October 2016); OED – http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=syndrome (last access: 17 October 2016); GMM – http://www.grammar.cl/rules/genitive-case.htm (last access: 17 October 2016); NS – https://goo.gl/RTU3if (last access: 17 October 2016).
SYN: Cotard’s delusion
S: MTF – https://goo.gl/zVqnHR (last access: 17 October 2016)
CR: delusion, hypochondria, syndrome.