Infectious Mononucleosis with Psychosis

Abstract
INVOLVEMENT of the central nervous system in infectious mononucleosis has been reported by a number of authors since the patients with meningitis described in 1931 by Johansen1 and by Epstein and Dameshek.2 However, cases of infectious mononucleosis associated with psychosis have not appeared up to the present time in the literature to our knowledge. Many cases of meningitis and peripheral-nerve palsies, occurring separately or together, have been reported.3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Bernstein's13 monograph summarized most of these early reports up to 1940. In 1941, while publishing the details of a case of meningeal involvement, together with ataxia, catatonia and slurred speech, Landes, Reich . . .

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