Dictionary Definition
catatonia
Noun
1 extreme tonus; muscular rigidity; a common
symptom in catatonic schizophrenia
2 a form of schizophrenia characterized by a
tendency to remain in a fixed stuporous state for long periods; the
catatonia may give way to short periods of extreme excitement [syn:
catatonic
schizophrenia,
catatonic type schizophrenia]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A severe psychiatric condition, often associated with schizophrenia, characterized by a tendency to remain in a rigid state of stupor for long periods which give way to short periods of extreme agitation
Related terms
Extensive Definition
- This is a page about catatonic state. For the band, see Catatonia (band).
Catatonia is a syndrome of psychic and motoric
disturbances. In the current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders published by the American Psychiatric Association
(DSM-IV) it is not recognized as a separate disorder, but is
associated with psychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia (catatonic
type), bipolar
disorder,
post-traumatic stress disorder, depression
and other mental disorders, as well as drug abuse
and/or overdose. It may
also be seen in many medical disorders including infections (such
as encephalitis), autoimmune disorders, focal neurologic lesions
(including strokes), metabolic disturbances and abrupt or overly
rapid
withdrawal from benzodiazepines. It can be an adverse reaction
to prescribed medication. It bears similarity to conditions such as
encephalitis
lethargica and
neuroleptic malignant syndrome. There are a variety of
treatments available, and depending on the case, one or more drugs
may be used, including antipsychotics and
benzodiazepines.
Clinical features
Patients with catatonia may experience an extreme loss of motor ability or constant hyperactive motor activity. Catatonic patients will sometimes hold rigid poses for hours and will ignore any external stimuli. Patients with catatonic excitement can die of exhaustion if not treated. Patients may also show stereotyped, repetitive movements. They may show specific types of movement known as "waxy flexibility" in which they maintain positions after being placed in them by someone else, or gegenhalten (lit. "counterhold"), in which they resist movement in proportion to the force applied by the examiner. They may repeat meaningless phrases or speak only to repeat what the examiner says.While catatonia is only identified as a form of
schizophrenia in present psychiatric classifications, it is
increasingly recognized as a syndrome with many faces. It appears
as the Kahlbaum syndrome (retarded catatonia), malignant catatonia
(neuroleptic malignant syndrome, toxic serotonin syndrome), and
excited forms (delirious mania, catatonic excitement,
oneirophrenia). [Fink M, Taylor MA: CATATONIA: A Clinician's Guide
to Diagnosis and Treatment, Cambridge U Press, 2003]. It has also
been recognized as grafted on to autistic spectrum disorders.
[Dhossche D et al: Catatonia in Autism Spectrum Disorders,
Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2006]
Diagnostic criteria
According to the DSM-IV, the "With catatonic features" specifier can be applied if the clinical picture is dominated by at least two of the following:- motor immobility as evidenced by catalepsy (including waxy flexibility) or stupor;
- excessive motor activity (purposeless, not influenced by external stimuli);
- extreme negativism (motiveless resistance to all instructions or maintenance of a rigid posture against attempts to be moved) or mutism;
- peculiarities of voluntary movement as evidenced by posturing, stereotyped movements, prominent mannerisms, or prominent grimacing
- echolalia or echopraxia.
Subtypes
Stupor is a motionless, apathetic state in which one is oblivious or does not react to external stimuli. Motor activity is nearly non-existent. Individuals in this state make little or no eye contact with others and may be mute and rigid. One might remain in one position for a long period of time, and then go directly to another position immediately after the first position.Catatonic excitement is a state of constant
purposeless agitation
and excitation. Individuals in this state are extremely hyperactive
although the activity seems to lack purpose.
A catatonia rating scale has been developed to
identify the syndrome. [Fink M, Taylor MA: CATATONIA . . .]. The
diagnosis is verified by a benzodiazepine or barbiturate test. The
diagnosis is validated by the quick response to either
benzodizepines or ECT.
Treatment
Initial treatment is aimed at providing relief from the catatonic state. Benzodiazepines are the first line of treatment, and high doses are often required. A test dose of 1-2 mg intramuscular lorazepam will often result in marked improvement within half an hour. In France, zolpidem has also been used in diagnosis and response may occur within the same time period. Ultimately the underlying cause needs to be treated.Electroconvulsive
therapy is an effective treatment for catatonia as well as for
most of the underlying causes (e.g. psychosis, mania, depression).
Antipsychotics
should be used with care as they can worsen catatonia and are the
cause of
neuroleptic malignant syndrome, a dangerous condition that can
mimic catatonia and requires the immediate discontinuation of the
antipsychotic.
References
Caroff, Stanley N, MD (Editor); Mann, Stephen C
(Editor); Francis, Andrew (Editor); Fricchioni, Gregory L, MD
(Editor);Catatonia: From Psychopathology to Neurobiology; American
Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. 2004
Fink M., Taylor MA. Catatonia: A Clinician's
Guide to Diagnosis and Treatment. Cambridge UK: Cambridge
University Press, 2003.
Dhossche DM, Wing L, Ohta M, Neumärker, K-J
(Editors): Catatonia in Autism Spectrum Disorders. Amsterdam:
Elsevier, Int Rev Biol 72; 2006.
catatonia in German: Katatonie
catatonia in Spanish: Catatonia (síndrome)
catatonia in French: Catatonie
catatonia in Italian: Catatonia
catatonia in Hungarian: Katatónia
catatonia in Dutch: Katatonie
catatonia in Uzbek: Katatoniya
catatonia in Polish: Katatonia (zaburzenie
motoryki)
catatonia in Portuguese: Catatonia
catatonia in Romanian: Catatonie
catatonia in Russian: Кататонический
синдром
catatonia in Slovenian: Katatonija
catatonia in Finnish: Katatonia
(oireyhtymä)
catatonia in Swedish: Katatoni