CATATONIA
is a complex neuropsychiatric behavioral syndrome that is characterized by abnormal movements, immobility, abnormal behaviors, and withdrawal. The onset of catatonia can be acute or subtle and symptoms can wax, wane, or change during episodes. It has historically been related to schizophrenia (catatonic schizophrenia); catatonia is most often seen in mood disorders.
Until recently, it was thought of as a type of schizophrenia, but doctors now understand that other mental illnesses and some conditions that throw off your body’s metabolism also can make you catatonic. About 1 person in 10 who has a severe mental illness will have catatonia at some point.
Catatonia can be treated, but if it’s not, it can lead to life-threatening problems.
SYMPTOMS AND DIAGNOSIS
Doctors can diagnose someone as catatonic if they have any three of these signs:
- Not responding to other people or their environment
- Not speaking
- Holding their body in an unusual position
- Resisting people who try to adjust their body.
- Agitation
- Repetitive, seemingly meaningless movement
- Mimicking someone else’s speech
- Mimicking someone else’s movements
TYPES
There are three types of catatonia:
- Akinetic catatonia. This is the most common. Someone with akinetic catatonia often stares blankly and won’t respond when you speak to them. If they do respond, it may only be to repeat what you said. Sometimes they sit or lie in an unusual position and won’t move.
- Excited catatonia. With this type, the person may move around, but their movement seems pointless and impulsive. They may seem agitated, combative, or delirious, or they may mimic the movements of someone who’s trying to help them.
- Malignant catatonia. This type happens when the symptoms lead to other health problems, like dangerous changes in blood pressure, body temperature, or breathing or heart rate. Someone who’s catatonic for a long time may be more likely to have problems like dehydration, blood clot, or kidney failure as a result of the symptoms.
CAUSES
Doctors aren’t sure exactly what makes someone become catatonic. It happens most often with people who have mood disorders or psychotic disorders, like depression, bipolar disorders, and schizophrenia. About a third of people who are catatonic also have bipolar disorder.
Several physical conditions can lead to catatonia in people who don’t have a mental illness. These include:
- Conditions that affect your body chemistry, like kidney problems, diabetes, and thyroid conditions
- Parkinson’s disease, which attacks your body’s nervous system.
- Encephalitis, an infection that affects your brain.
TREATMENT
Doctors usually treat catatonia with a kind of sedative called a benzodiazepine that’s often used to ease anxiety.
Another treatment option is electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). It sends electrical impulses to the person’s brain through electrodes placed on their head. (They’re given medicine to sleep through the procedure.) It might be recommended if:
- Sedatives don’t work.
- The catatonia is severe.
- The person has had catatonia before.
- Quick action is needed to save someone’s life.
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