Abstract

Catatonia syndrome is characterized by motor, behavioral and affective abnormalities in association with psychiatric and medical illnesses and delirium syndrome is defined as acute brain dysfunction caused by an underlying medical condition or toxic exposure. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition (DSM-5) contains a caveat that limits diagnosing catatonia in patients during delirium. However, the literature has shown that up to 31% of patients have co-occurring catatonia and delirium when using the Bush Francis Catatonia Rating Scale and 12.7% of patients with delirium meet DSM-5 criteria for catatonia. The authors present a case of a patient with concomitant delirium and catatonia. Diagnosing catatonia in this patient, even in the setting of delirium, was necessary for appropriate treatment and clinical improvement. Typical treatment for patients with delirium, antipsychotic medication, contributes to the worsening of catatonia while first-line treatment for catatonia, benzodiazepines, has been shown to exacerbate delirium. Delayed recognition of the patient’s catatonia resulted in inadequate treatment that worsened her catatonic symptoms and prolonged hospitalization. The potential contraindications to treatment interventions call for an appropriate diagnosis of catatonia when co-occurring with delirium despite the DSM-5 limitation. The World Health Organization (WHO) ICD-11 code for catatonia allows for less exclusivity in assessing for clinical catatonia in that the limitations to diagnosis only include harmful effects of drugs, medicaments or biological substance, not elsewhere classified - a more collaborative definition for catatonia criteria in the DSM-5 and the ICD-11 codes can provide a way forward with more flexibility in symptom interpretation and treatment.

Highlights

  • Catatonia is a syndrome characterized by prominent motor, behavioral and affective abnormalities that occur in both psychiatric and medical illnesses [1]

  • Catatonia syndrome is characterized by motor, behavioral and affective abnormalities in association with psychiatric and medical illnesses and delirium syndrome is defined as acute brain dysfunction caused by an underlying medical condition or toxic exposure

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) ICD-11 code for catatonia allows for less exclusivity in assessing for clinical catatonia in that the limitations to diagnosis only include harmful effects of drugs, medicaments or biological substances, not elsewhere classified [17]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Catatonia is a syndrome characterized by prominent motor, behavioral and affective abnormalities that occur in both psychiatric and medical illnesses [1]. The patient’s affect was bright and her thought content was logical and coherent Her gait was noted to be much improved and her confusion had subsided. The patient was noted to resist sleep, exhibit disorientation to time, pace in the hallways and stare at the television while it was off Her last dose of lorazepam was given at 1800 that day. The morning of day 7, the patient had a bright affect and was able to acknowledge that her confused states fluctuated, often getting worse at night and clearing in the morning Her thoughts were logical and coherent and her gait was normal. On day 10, she had a bright affect with a logical and coherent thought process Her gait was normal and the patient's husband reported that her behavioral presentation was at baseline. On day 11, the patient was discharged on lorazepam 1mg TID and divalproex sodium 750mg daily at bedtime

Discussion
Conclusions
Findings
Disclosures
American Psychiatric Association
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call