Finally we have our second installment of bizarre brain-related disorders. In our first list we covered such illnesses as Stockholm Syndrome, and Stendhal Syndrome. This time we are looking at some slightly more physical disorders – many of which are the result of physical damage to the brain or parts of the body.
If you have suffered from any of these illnesses, or know of people who have, it would be great to hear about your experiences. Most of these are very rare, but a number of them are surprisingly common.
A person suffering from this disorder experiences the sensation that a missing limb (or even organ, such as the appendix) is still present on the body. 50 – 80% of people who have had an amputation experience this disorder. The sufferer will very often feel pain and discomfort in the phantom limb. Some sufferers can feel their phantom limbs gesticulating while they talk, and others believe that the limb is acting independently of their will. This disorder is often treated with Virtual Reality therapy (as pictured above).
Also known as Amputee Identity Disorder, this illness causes a person to wish to have a healthy part of their body amputated. In some cases, the sufferer has gone so far as to amputate their own limbs. Some sufferers also have sexual fetishes involving amputees. Some surgeons have actually amputated a limb for a person suffering this disorder, but it is a highly controversial move and most doctors use similar treatments to those used for phantom limb disorders.
Mythomania is a condition involving compulsive lying by a person with no obvious motivation. The affected person might believe their lies to be truth, and may have to create elaborate myths to reconcile them with other facts. A “pathological liar” is someone who often embellishes his or her stories in a way that he or she believes will impress people. It may be that a pathological liar is different from a normal liar in that a pathological liar believes the lie he or she is telling to be true at least in public and is “playing” the role.
Somatoparaphrenia is a type of monothematic delusion where one suddenly denies ownership of a limb or an entire side of ones body. For example, a patient might believe that his own arm would belong to the doctor, or that another patient left it behind. It can sometimes be treated by vestibular caloric stimulation (squirting warm water into the patient’s ear in a specific way), although most sufferers will not be aware of this and may request amputation, which is almost always denied as amputating a healthy limb would be a basic violation of the Hippocratic Oath. In the image above we see a series of drawings made by a sufferer of this disorder.
Munchausen syndrome is a psychiatric disorder in which those affected fake disease, illness, or psychological trauma in order to draw attention or sympathy to themselves. It is in a class of disorders known as factitious disorders which involve “illnesses” whose symptoms are either self-induced or falsified by the patient. It is also sometimes known as hospital addiction syndrome. A related illness is Munchausen Syndrome By Proxy in which the person feigns the illness in another person – usually going so far to cause them harm to perpetuate the myth in order to gain sympathy for themselves.
This may sound familiar to drug users: AIWS or Micropsia is a condition in which a patient’s sense of time, space and body image are distorted. People may appear tiny or patients may feel that part of their body shape or size has been altered. A sufferer may perceive humans, parts of humans, animals, and inanimate objects as substantially smaller than in reality. Another name for the condition is Lilliput sight or Lilliputian hallucinations. The image above illustrates the illusion suffered by patients of this disorder.
In Neglect Syndrome, a person loses the ability to give equal attention to both sides of a space. For example, a patient in a rehabilitation hospital may wake up in the morning and proceeds to shave his face – only to be told later that he has only shaved half of his face. A person with this disorder, when drawing a person, will often leave off the arm and leg from one side, and when questioned, will state that it looks perfectly fine to them. When drawing a clock, the sufferer will often draw a circle and stuff all of the numbers in to one side (as in the image above). Neglect Syndrome is most often caused by damage to one hemisphere of the brain, as in the case of a stroke.
Kleptomania is the disease in which a person has great difficulty resisting the impulse to steal something. Despite this being a disorder, the US and UK courts do not consider it a defense against stealing. Kleptomania usually begins in puberty and continues until late adulthood. It is considered to be a part of the obsessive compulsive range of disorders. Kleptomaniacs usually steal items of little value, and some will tend to steal the same types of items repeatedly.
Foreign Accent Syndrome is a very rare disorder which usually occurs after some kind of brain injury (such as a stroke or head injury). When a person suffers from this syndrome they speak their native language with a foreign accent. There have been 50 recorded cases of this syndrome between 1941 and 2006. According to Wikipedia, a well-known case of foreign accent syndrome occurred in Norway in 1941 after a young woman, Astrid L., suffered a head injury from shrapnel during an air-raid. After apparently recovering from the injury she was left with what sounded like a strong German accent and was shunned by her fellow Norwegians. You can read about one case on the BBC.
Genital Retraction Syndrome is a strange disorder in which the sufferer believes that his genitals (or breasts in the case of women sufferers) are shrinking, retracting in to the body, or may be removed entirely. Even more strangely, there have been cases of this occurring amongst many people at the same time; this is called penis panic. The phenomenon is often associated with occult beliefs or witchcraft. Outbreaks of penis panic occurred in China in 1948, 1955, 1966, 1974 and 1984/85. It is worth reading the Wikipedia article on this very bizarre syndrome.
Contributor: Abhishek
This article is licensed under the GFDL because it contains quotations from the Wikipedia articles cited above.





























SlickWily:
I just want to let you know that I never mind someone disagreeing with me when it’s done in a responsible, intelligent manner…as was yours.
The nyah-nyah-nyah, kind of response just annoys me.
I respect intelligence, and clear minded debates are invigorating and educational.
I tend to agree with you on most topics, but when I don’t, I have no problem saying so. Neither do you. I like this.
diz
I have to admit it, this time I think the list is pretty legit. I’ve actually heard of some of these, and the others, well I can believe the disorder-ness of them.
Genital Retraction Syndrome: HA! And as if people reading couldn’t tell what the syndrome was about by the title, before they read the description, the very suited picture of Rice looking like she’s scolding someone for having a small penis was added. Very nice. I laughed. Go on, take your penis problems elsewhere.
Somatophrenia is pretty crazy. It would wig me out to meet someone like that. And honestly, do doctors really amputate patients’ healthy limbs upon request? Gawd, that’s a little *****ed up, isn’t it?
Neglet Syndrome and Foreign Accent Syndrome are both very interesting. I would like to meet people with these two disorders. Especially neglet. Crazy!
And as for the Alice in Wonderland Syndrome, yes, it does sound familiar to me. I once thought I felt my mouth grow more and more open, widening and stretching to the point where you could have taken the top and pulled it up and around my skull and back down, and pushed my jaw down, as if my face was just a mask and I was pulling it off from my mouth and wearing it around my neck as a scarf. And I wanted to do so; it may just have been the LSD, however…
Dank: That’s why I don’t chew gum and get high anymore. Freaked me out, I felt like a Pezz dispenser for the rest of the day
I never got why all the kids in my fourth grade class liked those things. Not much of a Pezz fan. Could munch out on some Twizzlers though. And for those of you thinking “that’s not even in the same family of candy” – I know.
*****mania and satyriasis must qualify for this list.
I know someone with the liar thing! Well, she hasn’t been diagnosed YET. But I am very convinced that she has it. In fact, if that’s all there is to it, there are a LOT of teenage girls with it.
Both lists have been very interesting, although I personally preferred the first one – I’m a bit of a hypochondriac, so any non-physical disease is a lot easier for me to swallow.
LOL
I recommend reading the book “Phantoms of the Brain” written by world’s leading Neuroscientist VS Ramachadran. Awesome.
The only mental disorder on this list that makes me go hmmm is number 2. Any theater major who has taken classes in dialects knows that the key to learning and mastering a new dialect is to train those different muscles in the face that control the movements associated. Therefore it has always been my beleif since I first heard about this disease that this is not really a mental disease so much as the brain getting confused and controlling different muscles. The syndrome description even says that it happens after a brain injury or trauma. Granted I am most certainly not a doctor or psychologist, but this just seemed obvious to me. Always has and always will, but I am no doctor so what do I know?
On Tuesday, 20, May
Author: abhilash warrier said:
Comment:
I recommend reading the book “Phantoms of the Brain” written by world’s leading Neuroscientist VS Ramachadran. Awesome.
I’ll second that, and any other book by Ramachadran. Also, any book by Oliver Sacks.
Does anyone know about the current Fundivision situation? The last I saw, just now, it was still there and any references to LV or the Fundivision admin were gone. LV user comments too.
Zero credit to anyone.
yes friend, i have heard of this. and i feel like pooping right now, but i am going to help you through this tough time
when i was a kid, i had these horrible nightmares while i was awake, i felt like everything was in slow motion but i was doing things very fast. and objects around me very giant and chunky. very bizarre, it has happen to me three times. and it is horrible. i don’t know if this is alice in wonderland syndrome. but it kind of sounds like it
crapsandwich, your symptom sounds very scary. I think I’d get myself off to the nearest shrink and find out what what the double drat is going on!
I had some pretty bizarre things happening at 18-19, but I knew from wench they sprang, so they weren’t scary…except maybe the witch…but that’s off topic. I’m serious about the shrink. Find out why your your brain wants to make you crazy, and you ca learn ways to make it stop.
diz
Author: crapsandwich
Comment:
when i was a kid, i had these horrible nightmares while i was awake, i felt like everything was in slow motion but i was doing things very fast. and objects around me very giant and chunky. very bizarre, it has happen to me three times. and it is horrible. i don’t know if this is alice in wonderland syndrome. but it kind of sounds like it
crapsandwitch: wow thats some crazy *****!
Somatoparaphrenia and Genital Retraction Syndrome were my favorite.
penis panic!? am i the only one who finds this alliteration hillarious??
dude, I totally do too, I was wondering when someone was gonna say something about that. lol
So do I, especially paired with the pic of Connie Rice
Joshua De`Lioncourt- nope, not only you. I find it funny too. *laughs pants off* whoever made up that alliteration must have an astounding sense of humor.
hahaha love the images in #2 and #1
WOW!!! Amazing!! Penis Panic LOL
When I scrolled down and saw Madonna’s picture, I let out a laugh.
i think i have mythomania & alice in wonderland syndrom
thanks alot, im scared now.
Munchausen Syndrome By Proxy is real, but quite rare and WAAAAAAAY over diagnosed, the diagnosis is almost impossible to prove and extremely difficult to disprove once the accusation has been made. A lot of innocent families have been torn to pieces by zealous, self-righteous psychiatrists and child protection authorities, absolutely convinced of their infallibility, and once you have been labelled with it the social and legal stigma is very hard to shake, even if you are found completely innocent.
And synaethesia is not a mental disorder, or any other kind of disorder, that is a common false belief. It does not impair those who have it in any way, or affect their social relationships, and is actually relatively common in its mild form.
145. Blind Mango Chutney
Munchausen Syndrome By Proxy is real, but quite rare and WAAAAAAAY over diagnosed
****
And your professional qualifications would be what?
And your professional qualifications would be what?
****
Worked in this general area of medicine for 25 years. Know the peer reviewed database very well. Spend most of my week working with it and other researchers and talking to various patients.
Vastly better qualified than probably every other participant on this thread.
Don’t assume that everybody in this field agrees with all the current formal classifications and diagnoses (and certainly not the treatments). The field of mental health suffers from more political and social fads than any other area of medicine.
And your qualifications would be what?
****
147. Blind Mango Chutney
And your professional qualifications would be what?
****
I wasn’t asking because I doubted you. You sounded too spot-on to be a troll or a spammer, in fact, it was obvious it worked somewhere in the field. I simply wanted to know what field was your particular area of expertise.
Perhaps I put my query too bluntly. If so, I apologize. It was not meant to be an insult of any sort.
*My* only qualifications would be, at first hand, having been exposed to several of these conditions while taking care of my mother after a devastating right hemisphere stroke.
At second hand, having read 150 -200 books on neurology (yes, I know, nothing like what a real doctor has done, but enough to give me a flavor), because I have an extremely rare neurological disease.
Matt: same here. i want to tell people the truth, but sometime I can’t even remember what is real and what i made up
This is an interesting link… but is it possible to list or name some people that have actually suffered from those disorders? I’m just curious where they come from, why they suffer from those disorders, what happened to them in their life, did they turn out ok. Thanks.
Here is a perfect example of Steve McLaren who appears to suffer from disorder #2; http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=F8oN58cyp2c
Synesthesia is not considered a “mental disorder”. It is, rather a form of perception (enjoyably) experienced by 4 per cent of the population. This form of perception is charaterized by blended perceptions–where words can have color, music can have shapes. for more information, visit:
http://www.bluecats.info
I have aiws (alice in wonderland syndrome).
for real…i’m not kidding lol.
its strange…i didnt realized what i was experiancing was an actuall condition tell i was older. i did some research and realized it had a name lol.
153. cait: That’s one of the really wonderful things about the human brain; it treats anything it’s accustomed to as usual, as the norm.
How can it not? It has no other experience against which to judge.
I’m convinced that my mother has munchausen by proxy…but it’s in a weird form that she is delaying my back surgery so she can get sympathy for a longer period of time from co workers…she works in a hospital by the way.. she also took pictures of my sister immediately after having a c-section, and then pictures of the premature twins who were hooked up to tubes and wires, to show to her coworkers! it seems she knows who she can get sympathy from, and goes to those people daily to get her fix…
it’s amazing that i turned out as well as i did…
I wish I had Foreign Accent Syndrome. Then I can have an excuse to do a British accent when I feel like it (though Australian accents are pretty cool).
But whats with the pic of Condi Rice? I don’t get it.
The Condi Rice picture looks like she is illustrating the size of someone’s genitals
I have been hearing about something called Truman Syndrome (there is another name but i failed to find it) where people believe they are on a reality TV show and think people are following and documenting their every move. interesting.. and Madonna. very funny
I have extreme mythomania. Seriously. I lie every day, without any reason.
Alice in Wonderland syndrome interests me for two reasons…one, I love that book; two, it seems to explain a recurring night terror I had as a child. Huh.
My penis isn’t shrinking! Everybody else’s is just getting bigger..
Hyperekplexia is a genetic neurological disorder, NOT a mental illness. It is also entirely distinct from either Latah or the “Jumping Frenchmen” phenomena. Check out NORD or WEMOVE.org.
My mother has suffered and still suffers from Munchausen Syndrome By Proxy. She almost killed me and my son because of it. Fortunately I found out before it was too late and booked it out of her realm.
162. Carrie: Good lord! How horrifying! If you had evidence, couldn’t you press charges, thus keeping safe the next person to fall under her spell?
CrapSanwich-i, for years, have felt like people and objects around me were on slow motion while i was on fast forward. occasioanlly the reverse happens, but usually i feel sped up. i was diagnosed as having bipolar. i get symptoms when i’m seriously stressed out or when i don’t get sleep. anything cause your symptoms? what about the rest of you who id with these?
I’m a rehab nurse and I get alot of amputees and head injury patients. #10 A note worthy part of Phantom Limb Disorder is the patient may also experience Phantom Limb Pain. If their leg is amputated they may complain of very real pain to their foot. Sometimes they literally have an itch they can’t scratch. Its very difficult to help patients with Phantom Limb Pain, sometimes pain meds work and sometimes they don’t. As for the itching I have yet to find them relief for that.
#4 Kudos for this picture of the clock, having a patient draw a clock is one of the most common and easy ways to identify neglect syndrome.
that is great collection
your information about health is fantastic
My grandfather had his leg amputated about 10 years before he died. For that whole decade he suffered from phantom limb disorder and suffered severe pain in his missing limb which of course wasn’t helped by any medication.
Alice in Wonderland syndrome is apparently quite common in kids, and I’ve experienced it many times in adulthood, too. I remember telling my dad when I was about 5 that everything far away was “just so tiny!” and I was irritated that I couldn’t explain it further.
i know a blind woman, who has an amputated limb, apparently due to her blindness she still suffers from phantom limb disorder, while sometimes it will go away after a while in other people, she continues to take medication for it.
It’s to bad you don’t have the brain disease called synesthesia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synesthesia
You’ll be amazed if when you read it!
You can always ask something at me over it!
Cool list. The brain is so strange.
I’ve been through Alice in Wonderland syndrome, but not because of drugs. My doctor said it was because of my epilepsy
I have been mastectomized in March, and sometimes at night feel my breast thickling or pulsing in a weird way. Like a little spider is actually crawling on it, I go ther to schratch it away.. and …
Weird..
@42 ringtailroxy
i can haz cheezgrater?
I’ve never personally experienced any of the disorders from this list. Though I might’ve known a few people who had mythomania. Okay. I think I have wondered in the past whether I was a kleptomaniac (but I’m not).
One thought I had as I read the list: in the intro, it says that of these disorders- some are very rare but are surprisingly common. You know how there are people out there who will say they have a mental disorder of some kind for attention, or self-gratifiation? Well, I wonder how many of these people actually have Munchausen syndrome? I suppose it depends, eh?
What the hell was up with Madonna & the faux british accent she had? I wonder– did something actually happen to her? lol (Don’t laugh; I’m asking.)
And what was going on with the picture of Condolezza Rice? (at first I couldn’t tell it was her.) Did what she was doing have anything to do w/ the Penis Panic, mentioned in the Genital Retraction syndrome part?
Amazing list
Seems disrespectful to include Condoleeza’s picture and removes some of the academic legitimacy to the article. The list is great but I don’t understand why that was needed. The science itself is interesting enough I think.
I always “thumbs down” sites with pop-up ads…. sorry. BTW, don’t steal content… it’s rude.
I invented mythomania. True story.
Hey, what about people who desperately wish they suffered from various diseases? Is that related to Munchausen’s? I ask because I knew a kid who was weirdly stuck on the conviction that he was disabled in some way. Never saw anyone happier than he was the day, in elementary school, we did vision and hearing tests and they (briefly) declared that he needed glasses and a hearing aid. Real doctors later looked into his ears and determined that he was just a poor listener, his eyes and saw that he, for some reason, wanted glasses.
I have been reading a lot on here the topic Another 10 Bizarre Mental Disorders – Listverse inspired me, i have picked up some great ideas. Thanks and i hope to see more soon.