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Tuberous Sclerosis Complex as a Social Determinant of Health, Alongside Its Psychiatric Comorbidities: A Case Report.

Curēus 2024 Februrary
Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a neurocutaneous disease that manifests across multiple body systems. While there are substantial guidelines and protocols for managing the physical presentation of the disease, managing the psychosocial factors and the adverse effects as a social determinant of health is complex and unclear. This study discusses a patient with TSC who was hospitalized for pneumonia and how both her psychiatric and somatic symptoms were managed. Here we present the case of a 38-year-old Caucasian female with shortness of breath and generalized weakness. She had a past medical history of TSC and pneumothorax. This patient presented to the emergency department agitated and initially combative with her care team. Ultimately, she was administered dexmedetomidine to reduce her agitation. Here we suggest that this patient's agitation and other psychiatric symptoms are intimately related to her diagnosis of TSC. Because of the heavy burden of TSC on the patient's life, the patient's aggressive nature could be an act of displacement of feelings from her medical complications onto her interactions with others. The patient understood that her complications hindered her ability to function as a healthy 38-year-old and perform activities of daily living without severe exhaustion. Just as her condition and its secondary complications hindered her body, feelings of anger and despair hindered her ability to appropriately interact and socialize with others. TSC is a debilitating condition that targets the body and mind. While much research has gone into treating each somatic system it may affect, there is a disconnect between the psychiatric aftermath and the toll that such a condition's psychiatric comorbidities may take on its patients.

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