was pregnant. In their marriage, her husband was the boss. In 1966, her father committed suicide because she had asked him for money that he was unable to give her. She still feels guilty about this. In 1979, she began to revolt and became a little more independent – she got her driver’s license. In 1981, she had her first psychotic attack. This attack lasted for five days, and during this time her state would become worse at night,closed herself in the bathroom, screamed, stamped, and ran from room to room. In between these psychotic phases, she experienced periods of relaxation.. The attack ended when the priest came and talked about the problems in her marriage.
In 1984, she suffered a second attack: One afternoon her chil-dren’s rabbit was killed by a dog, and that evening she had the attack. She began homeopathic treatment in 1986. Her physical complaints and weakness improved, as did her self-confidence. However, in May, 1986, she suffered a third attack. Subsequent attacks followed in April, 1988, and in January and February, 1989. These attacks could be arrested with Haloperidol®, which the patient had to take for approximately ten to twenty days. In between attacks, the patient became more and more self-confident; she ventured to find her own way, and tried not to rely as heavily on her husband as she had before. She even considered leaving her husband. The patient is in a manner of psychotherapy. When she tries to make serious decisions con-cerning her marriage, she goes into this psychotic state. The patient has had liver problems ever since the beginning of her marriage, and these problems are always aggravated after nar-cosis. She has had ten narcoses in her life, mostly administered for gynecological examinations. She had a brain concussion on her forehead.
Description of attacks: Is in a panic, (she underlined this twice); feels responsible to wake up the whole world before it is destroyed by war; that’s why she has to hit the walls with power to alarm people, (3x). Responsibilities that she cannot