Schizophrenia Forum - Brother Diagnosed With Delusional Disorder - Need Advice
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Brother Diagnosed With Delusional Disorder - Need Advice

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Medical Questions-> Health Forums -> Schizophrenia -> Brother Diagnosed With Delusional Disorder - Need Advice
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ddsister

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 10 Jul 2005
Posts: 1
Brother Diagnosed With Delusional Disorder - Need Advice
Posted: 07-10-05 19:12pm

My brother was diagnosed with dd last fall during a 3 day stay at a hospital. He was prescribed risperdal but stop taking it after a couple of days because he read the one of the side effects was weight gain. He immediately left town and now has been south, north, and west coast. He moves around alot because "they" are after him. His symptons have been and basically in this order:

people following him
people bugged his car, house, etc.
He cut the wires in his house because people were listening to him (only to cut the wires to the kitchen and bathroom)
he called the police because "they" were breaking into his house
the paparattzi were following him taking pictures of him
my dad broke into his apartment, hid under his bed, and injected him in the testicles with a std.
People heckle him on the beach
most recently, "they" have a voodoo doll of him and are putting hexes on him. One time, he turned his shirt inside out and that stopped it.
He's been on antibotics for several months (that he buys online) because he has a std that no Dr. Has confirmed
doctors are not really doctors (they are people dressed up as dr's)
he wants to get a restraining order aganist me, my brother, and parents or sue us.

He just showed up this weekend in town and after a hour with him, I found this website. I am alarmed at the suicide rate among patients. My biggest fear is that he will harm my parents. They seem to get the blunt of his anger. They are in their 70's and constantly help him out financially (he never says thank you or acknowledges their sacrifice). He is in his early 40's and hasn't worked in over 2 years and has barely worked in the last 5. He had some investments that he has run through and now creditors call my parents constantly. He is constantly thinking about his appearance and is on phentamine and khonapin. Both of which is buys illegal via the internet. Phentamine is a obseity drug and he is about 5'10" and weighs about 160lbs.

My parents are old school and think that god can heal him or its just a phase. After yesterday, I realize that the brother I once had is gone. I need help. What can we do?
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hunkirg

Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 09 Jul 2005
Posts: 50
Location: manitoba

Posted: 07-13-05 19:19pm

It is to understand that your brother never was who you thought he was. Although when he was younger he may have mirrored social behaviors or social responses, he has never been able to make the abstrct leap to understand the true meanings we attatch to them. He takes them literally and as fact and believes that people will do literally what they say. That is why the older he got the more socially awkward he would seem, not because he was losing ground, but because everyone else was understanding what the intended meanings were. Because of this, he has had many negative interactions, that have left him feeling that he is really picked on. It is to try to help him understand the intended meanings in very straight forward language that has literall meaning.
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Sybil

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 18 Jul 2005
Posts: 7
Location: Chicago

Posted: 07-18-05 13:25pm

This is a hard post to reply to for me. My ex-husband had many of the same behaviors that you are describing in your brother. We think my ex's symptoms began with anxiety attacks in his teens, that continued through his 20's and on into his 30's. Then, he started doing odd things. One day the rearview mirror came off of his truck (a very old truck) and he called me at work to tell me that someone had been "messing" with his truck while we slept. He called the police and they came out and made a report. I didn't think much about it at the time. Soon after, he began to believe that someone was after him and began sitting up in the dark, all night long, watching our front yard. If he saw any type of personal ad in the paper, which run on the front page of our local paper, that had a word in the text like, truck, our town, his first name (very common) or a word that he had used that day (lunch, food, drink, sun, cloud, etc.) he believed it was a message to him. He finally had to be hospitalized when he said that he had to kill himself to stop it, and he believed that all of the ceiling fans in our home contained listening devices and that god was listening to him, among others. There was only one room in our home that he felt wasn't bugged. I looked for information everywhere and finally figured out that his symptoms mirrored something called major depressive disorder that has paranoia with it, although it is not schizophrenia. After some fool psychiatrists, and we went through a few, I found one that my husband felt he could talk to and would listen to me when I described the things I was seeing. My ex was put on 3 medications, and after about 3 weeks, long enough for them to get into his system, he became like his old self. Unfortunately, he then believed he didn't need the meds anymore and quit taking them. I didn't stay for part 2. I did see him after our divorce and he now watches no tv other than religious programming and he writes to the television preachers. (the ex never was concerned with religion in his life and loved trash tv in his "other life").

As for your brother, there may be times of the day or week when he is more receptive to talking "sanely" than others. If you can find that time, talk to him about seeking help. It is available. If you really believe that he is a danger to himself or others, you can call the police and he can be involuntarily committed under the "baker act". If it comes to that, do not feel guilty like I did. My ex actually liked the structured environment of the hospital and he was safe. The more information you can give the doctors about previous anxiety attacks, family mental health, etc., the better.
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hunkirg

Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 09 Jul 2005
Posts: 50
Location: manitoba

Posted: 07-18-05 13:55pm

Plese read step on and if you can somehow get your brother to read it. If you take this approach to heart, you will see it work.
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