Severe psychosis due to Cushing's syndrome in a patient with a carcinoid tumour in the lung: a case report and review of the current management

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Abstract

Severe psychosis in patients with Cushing's syndrome is a rare occurrence and can be extremely resistant to medical therapy. We describe a case of a 51-year-old Afro-Caribbean female patient, with refractory severe hypertension (initially resistant to polypharmacy) and gradual development of severe psychosis secondary to ectopic Cushing's syndrome, who was subsequently diagnosed to have a carcinoid tumour in her lung. Her psychotic episodes - secondary to hypercortisolism and initially refractory to the medical therapy - subsided only after the resection of the carcinoid tumour in her right lower pulmonary lobe. Early localization and appropriate surgical resection of the ectopic ACTH-secreting tumour can be of immense value to the successful alleviation of the psychotic episodes of the patients with ectopic Cushing's syndrome.

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Baba, M., & Ray, D. (2015). Severe psychosis due to Cushing’s syndrome in a patient with a carcinoid tumour in the lung: a case report and review of the current management. World Journal of Surgical Oncology, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12957-015-0571-0

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