Why do neurologists miss catatonia in neurology emergency? A case series and brief literature review
•Catatonia is under diagnosed in the non-psychiatry settings.•Neurology residents could not identify catatonia but correctly diagnosed its etiology.•Catatonia was mostly confused with extrapyramidal syndrome.•Most organic causes of catatonia may present with extrapyramidal features. Catatonia is a w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical neurology and neurosurgery 2019-09, Vol.184, p.105375-105375, Article 105375 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Catatonia is under diagnosed in the non-psychiatry settings.•Neurology residents could not identify catatonia but correctly diagnosed its etiology.•Catatonia was mostly confused with extrapyramidal syndrome.•Most organic causes of catatonia may present with extrapyramidal features.
Catatonia is a well-described clinical syndrome characterized by features that range from mutism, negativism and stupor to agitation, mannerisms and stereotype. Causes of catatonia may range from organic brain disorders to psychiatric conditions. Despite a characteristic syndrome, catatonia is grossly under diagnosed. The reason for missed diagnosis of catatonia in neurology setting is not clear. Poor awareness is an unlikely cause because catatonia is taught among conditions with deregulated consciousness like vegetative state, locked-in state and akinetic mutism. We determined the proportion of catatonia patients correctly identified by neurology residents in neurology emergency. We also looked at the alternate diagnosis they received to identify catatonia mimics. Twelve patients (age 22–55 years, 7 females) of catatonia were discharged from a single unit of neurology department from 2007 to 2017. In the emergency department, neurology residents diagnosed none of the patients as catatonia. They offered diagnosis of extrapyramidal syndrome in 7, meningitis in 2, and conversion reaction, acute psychosis/encephalopathy and non-convulsive status epilepticus in one each. Their final diagnosis at discharge was catatonia due to general medical condition in 6 (progressive supranuclear palsy in 2, post-status epilepticus, uremic encephalopathy, glioblastoma multiforme and tuberculous meningitis in one each), catatonia due to major depression in 4, schizophrenia and idiopathic catatonia in one each. Extrapyramidal syndrome appeared as common mimic of catatonia. The literature reviewed also revealed the majority of organic catatonia secondary to causes that are usually associated with extrapyramidal features. Therefore, we suggest that neurologists should consider catatonia in patients presenting with extrapyramidal syndromes. |
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ISSN: | 0303-8467 1872-6968 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.clineuro.2019.105375 |