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Journal Article

Citation

Elliott RL. Behav. Sci. Law 1987; 5(3): 287-306.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1987, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/bsl.2370050305

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Organic brain syndromes are of forensic interest for several reasons. First, patients with organic brain syndromes may require judicial determination of competence in any of a number of areas, e.g., testamentary capacity, need for financial guardianship, or competence to make medical decisions. Second, any patient whose mental state is of legal interest will need evaluation for contributing organic factors; uncovering these factors may have considerable medical and legal consequence. Third, the discovery of organic factors may be decisive in the outcome of a judicial proceeding, where "hard" biological data are often accorded more weight, and are thus more persuasive, than "soft" psychological data. This article provides an introductory overview of the organic brain syndromes. For each syndrome, the clinical features are described and are illustrated with a case vignette, the more common etiologies are presented, and selected aspects to the evaluation are highlighted. In addition, since the detectian of malingered mental illness is a key component in many forensic contexts, characteristics are described which help to distinguish actual from malingered mental illness.


Language: en

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