• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Woman Faked Rare Disorder Until Doctors Solved The Mystery

May 4, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital have described how they solved a medical mystery, figuring out that their patient had been faking a rare genetic disorder. The recently published case report details how a woman turned up with some alarming symptoms, but as the medical team began to investigate, things just didn’t add up.

The patient first went to a different hospital, complaining of abdominal pain, nausea, involuntary jerking movements of her right arm and leg, a skin rash, and feelings of confusion. Her jaw was dislocated, which the patient claimed had happened five minutes before she arrived when her arm and leg started shaking again.

Advertisement

This sounds pretty scary, but the patient claimed to have an explanation: she told doctors that she’d experienced all this before and that it was part and parcel of a chronic disease called acute intermittent porphyria (AIP).

AIP, like all types of porphyria, is a genetic disorder that affects the synthesis of heme, a molecule that is essential for the production of hemoglobin in the blood. Enzymes convert precursor compounds into heme, but in cases of AIP, there aren’t enough of these enzymes around, so the precursors start to build up. It’s this buildup that causes symptoms in many different areas of the body, but these almost always include severe abdominal pain.

People with AIP can go months between attacks, and the attacks can look very different in different people, making it a challenge to diagnose. The woman in this case claimed to have a family history, saying her maternal grandmother had had the disease.

The usual treatment for an attack of AIP is a drug called hemin. The hospital treating the woman did not have enough of this drug on hand, though, which is how she ended up being transferred to Massachusetts General. Very quickly after starting treatment, the doctors there began to realize that some of the facts of the case just didn’t make sense.

Advertisement

For starters, a lot of what the patient was experiencing didn’t fit with the diagnosis of AIP that she claimed to have. “Her rashes are not typical of acute intermittent porphyria, although similar rashes have been associated with other forms of porphyria,” explains Dr Leigh H. Simmons in the case report. “Her pain and neurologic symptoms are not alleviated by standard treatment with hemin and dextrose infusions, nor by morphine.”

Other medical possibilities that could explain the woman’s symptoms were considered, but the more the medics tried to investigate her history, the more red flags popped up.

The patient was born in the US but said she had been living in the UK for the last 15 years. She gave details of a clinic that had treated her in the UK, but when the team contacted them for information, they had no record of a patient with her name. They had, however, received multiple previous requests for information from hospitals in the US, each one regarding a female patient with AIP with the same date of birth as the patient in this case.

These revelations led the team to bring in a psychiatrist colleague to evaluate the patient, and finally, a diagnosis was reached: not AIP at all, but factitious disorder. 

Advertisement

According to the case report, factitious disorder typically involves “exaggeration or invention of symptoms, induction of illness through ingestion or injection of substances, falsification of studies and medical records, or exacerbation of genuine medical findings through deliberate nonadherence to treatment.” 

When confronted with the team’s findings, the woman did not own up to her deception but chose to simply leave the hospital – it’s estimated that over three-quarters of patients with factitious disorder don’t admit that they’ve been faking, even when all the evidence is in front of them.

While this case is a win for the investigative skills of the medical team, the experience did not deter the woman. Shortly afterward, she turned up at another hospital – once again claiming to be having a flare of AIP – and was admitted to intensive care. She was found out when a hematologist who worked at both hospitals recognized her details. 

This tale might read like an entry in the House, M.D. casebook, and it would be easy to dismiss such stories as interesting oddities; but, while a formal diagnosis of factitious disorder is rare, the outlook for these individuals is not great, as the team explains in their report. 

Advertisement

“Ultimately, the prognosis is poor, given the increased morbidity and mortality related to feigning illness or undergoing unnecessary medical or surgical interventions.”

The study is published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

[H/T: Ars Technica]

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. EU wants world-first carbon border levy to hit more sectors after 2030
  2. Evergrande debt problems not just a local issue – Swiss National Bank
  3. TUI to raise 1.1 billion euros in equity after summer bookings boost
  4. Where Is The Most Remote Location On Planet Earth?

Source Link: Woman Faked Rare Disorder Until Doctors Solved The Mystery

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Sharks Don’t Have Bones To Fossilize, So How Do We Know Megalodon’s Size?
  • The Year’s Best Meteor Shower Is About To Hit Its Peak – How To Bag Yourself A “Fireball”
  • “Smoking Gun” Causing Parts Of Antarctic Ocean To Shine Weirdly Bright In Satellite Images Discovered
  • Watch: Endangered Foa’s Red Colobus Monkey Caught On Film For The First Time
  • Most Distant Black Hole Ever Confirmed From 500 Million Years After The Big Bang
  • Scientists Used Virtual Reality To Alter People’s Lucid Dreams In Mindboggling Feat
  • Vesna Vulović: The Woman Who Fell Over 10,000 Meters And Miraculously Survived
  • Why Do Lion Cubs Have Spots?
  • 80 Years On, Chilling Photos Of The Hiroshima Bombing Remind Us Why Nuclear Weapons Are Terrifying
  • Four Radioactive Wasp Nests Have Been Found At A Nuclear Facility In South Carolina
  • Ancient Burial Practices
  • Why Do Arms And Legs “Fall Asleep”?
  • Anatoli Bugorski: The Man Who Put His Head In A Particle Accelerator And Survived
  • Alpha Centauri A – Our Closest Sun-Like Star – Has A New “Very Strong Candidate” Planet
  • Redditors Claim They Can Smell When Someone Is Pregnant. Is That Really A Thing?
  • New Monster Black Hole 36.3 Billion Times Our Sun May Be “Most Massive” Ever Found
  • An Interstellar Mission To Visit A Black Hole Might Only Take 70 Years, Astrophysicist Says
  • Four Super Rare Barbary Lion Cubs Born At Czech Zoo In Conservation Win
  • NASA’s Perseverance Snaps One Of Sharpest 360° Panoramas On Mars Ever Taken
  • UAP Researchers Search For “Transient Events” In Earth’s Shadow, Finding Unexplained Events
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version