Acta Psychologica (Oct 2023)

A case of central adrenocortical insufficiency with alexithymia and alexisomia

  • Makoto Yamashita,
  • Sunao Matsubayashi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 240
p. 104030

Abstract

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The patient was a 27-year-old woman. Following physical examination for unconscious hypoglycemia, the patient was diagnosed with central adrenocortical insufficiency. She also had alexithymia and alexisomia. Alexisomia is the inability to recognize or describe bodily sensations. Alexithymia is the difficulty of expressing one's feelings adequately. Alexisomia can be described as impaired interoceptive awareness. She had been maltreated and emotionally abused by her parents; thus, her upbringing may have influenced the development of alexithymia and alexisomia. In addition, her upbringing may have influenced the reduced hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis activity. Her failure to perceive hypoglycemic symptoms as hypoglycemia was thought to have been influenced by her alexisomia. Interestingly, her alexisomia improved with steroid replacement therapy; however, the underlying mechanism remains unclear. However, exogenous steroids can also affect interoception. The patient was diagnosed with central adrenocortical insufficiency, an endocrine disorder, suggesting that psychosomatic factors may have been related to the patient's growth history.

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